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![]() "Jeff Liebermann" wrote in message ... Well, might as well go further off topic. I'll make it quick and painless. In about 2006, I discovered that I had prostate cancer. I got the bad news in 2005, after several years of a rising and falling PSA and one negative biopsy in July of 2004. I had been watching news for prostate cancer, so I knew what the treatments were, who was using them and what the success rates were. (Now, seven years "down the pike," things may be different; my perspective reflects best practices as of my diagnosis.) I opted for surgery. When my urologist asked what I wanted to do, I already knew. I said, "I want it out with the da Vinci robot." He said, "We have that." I said, "I know." I had read that my provider had gotten the first robot in San Diego earlier that year. I was referred to the surgeon who bought the robot and was accepted as a candidate. Six weeks later, done. PSA undetectable ever since; he got it all. Officially "cured" in another fifteen months, eight years post-op. I was probably lucky in many regards. The urologist was aggressive and he admitted it. He said, "I do more biopsies than anybody I know. It means I catch more cancers." (The biopsy has some slight pain associted with it but it's only mildly uncomfortable. I'd take a dozen in preference to having a tooth capped, for example." My provider, having just gotten the robot, didn't require me to ask them to pay for me to go off-network. My surgeon was the Chief of Surgery who had moved up through Urology, so he had done thousands of prostatectomies. I go back to see him every year. He's since been promoted to Chief of Staff but he still works Urology. Great guy. "Sal" (KD6VKW) |
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