What are the chances of cancer spreading beyond my prostate in the case of prostate cancer?

Doctor's Answers 1

After prostate cancer is diagnosed, doctors will do staging tests involving CT/MRI scans and bone scans to see is cancer has spread beyond the prostate. Staging refers to determining the extent of disease.

The cancer is still localised in the prostate in stage I and II. Prostate cancer has spread beyond the prostate in stage III and IV.

Singapore Cancer Registry statistics for 2009-2013 showed that 61.6% of men were diagnosed with prostate cancer that had not spread beyond their prostate (Stage I and II). On the other hand, 10.6% and 27.8% of men were diagnosed at stages III and IV respectively.

The key to early diagnosis of prostate cancer before it spreads beyond the prostate is to discuss with your doctor about doing prostate cancer screening from age 50 onwards (or earlier if you have a family history of prostate cancer). Early prostate cancer most often do not cause any symptoms, so you cannot rely on symptoms to warn you of cancer.

Similar Questions

When should men start to undergo prostate cancer screening?

Men without any family history of prostate cancer should undergo annual prostate checks from the age of 50 years old. Men with a family history of prostate cancer should start prostate checks from the age of 40 years old. These annual checks should be conducted till the age of 70 years old. The checks can be done by specialists such as urologists, or family physicians. The checks involve a prostate finger examination and PSA (prostate-specific antigen) blood tests.

Photo of Dr Siew Hong Ho

Answered By

Dr Siew Hong Ho

Urologist

Do I need a colonoscopy for tailbone and anal pain to rule out cancer?

Hi, The description of your symptoms appear to be proctalgia ani. While it literally translate to "pain in your anus", the persistence of your symptoms warrants a physical examination by a doctor. The causes can range anywhere from an anal fissure (tear in your anus), to deep anal infections, to referred pain from somewhere else e. g. coccydynia / pelvic floor strain (from your weight lifting), and stress.

Photo of Dr Jason Lim

Answered By

Dr Jason Lim

Colorectal Surgeon

Ask any health question for free

I’m not so sure about a procedure...

Ask Icon Ask a Question

Join Human

Sign up now for a free Human account to get answers from specialists in Singapore.

Sign Up

Get The Pill

Be healthier with our Bite-sized health news straight in your inbox