Month 14

February 21, 2025

Well, Good news and bad news. While the new lesion was benign, and there is no signs of metastatic activity, although microscopically anything could be happening. Unfortunately, four random cores in the vicinity of the original tumor were 3/4. Three of those were 10% Grade 4 and one was 20% Grade 4. The other eight were negative. My urologist says that I am pretty much in the same place I was last year.

So Grade 4 is still present, but it’s impossible to say whether or not I have more of it, even with one at 20%. Two samples have entered the nerve which is never good, both on the same side as the original lesion.

I expect to continue the plan of AS. There is apparently some progression. It seems slow, but I am still trying to assess that. I will be 70 in May, and I have made it another year without much in the way of side effects. The only thing I have experienced was a weak stream, which has improved over the year. Too bad the Grade 4 didn’t disappear. I need to up my game, to keep it at bay.

February 11, 2025

Biopsy #2 completed. It went uneventfully, with the exception that I now have to deal with the first week of short term after-effects as well as 3 months of long term after-effects. My urologist did the biopsy this time, instead of one of his associates, so during the bedside pre-biopsy chat, I asked again about sampling the missing lesion. He said that the MRI driven fusion biopsy cannot target a tumor that is no longer there, but that the 12 additional samples taken that do not target the new, smaller lesion, will sample from the general area where the original tumor was located.

I got the call from his office today, and we set up a February 20th date to have a face-to-face discussion with my urologist about the biopsy results. Stay tuned. I am cautiously optimistic.

February 1, 2025

February began in the wee hours of the morning with a lengthy discussion with another Active Surveillance guy who has been in AS for many years. He has been doing diet and supplements for a lot longer than I have, and so I had a lot to talk about.

What I learned from him included a ursolic acid mouthwash that puts UA more directly into the bloodstream. He also takes piperine he described as biopiperine for bioavailability.

He was not really doing anything with pomegranate seed oil and its punicic acid, so I dug up what I considered the most important research article on punicic acid on my site.

I will use this occasion to review my PSO Strategy (the focus of which is punicic acid) again to clarify and improve my thinking. And so is the nature of University-level research science paper reading. Each re-reading benefits from the knowledge learned between readings.

Here is the graph that I like to focus on.

This graph shows how punicic acid (PunA) kills metastatic prostate cancer. All 6 PC viability curves meet at two points, where they are all alive, point (0,1) top left, and where they are all dead, point(100,0) bottom right.

PC3 dies most quickly, where half are dead (IC50 means half are dead) at a very low concentration of 1.1 µM ( 1.1 millionth of a Mole per liter). The table to the right lists the PunA concentrations for IC50 for all six cancer cell lines. On the graph, that is the point where “Relative cell viability” = 0.5. Each curve passes through the height of 0.5 at different PunA concentrations. Those points of concentration for each curve are listed in the table. Note the x-axis is logarithmic. Find the definitions of the six cell lines and some details at the bottom of this post.

What does this graph say about my PC?

After a year of evidence collecting multiple PSA tests, 2 MRIs, and 1 biopsy, my Urologist says my case has significantly improved, and that he thinks, “Whatever you are doing mimics if I had prescribed you Finasteride. But since you are not taking Finasteride, whatever you are doing is the reason for the improvement. And Finasteride only shrinks Grade 3 PC, not Grade 4”.

Something shrank my first tumor to undetectable. That one was 10% Grade 4, 90% Grade 3. I have/had? so-called 3-4 on the Gleason Scale. Did I really kill off some Grade 4 PC?

So, what part of “what I am doing” is the most effective? That’s a good question and this graph makes me think is has a lot to do with with punicic acid. If I can get to 30 µM, I think I would be killing a lot of PC.

There doesn’t seem to be a blood test for punicic acid. And I am also taking a dozen or two other things, some specifically thought to help punicic acid do its work, and others supported by their own research. Let’s see what data comes in from the February 7th biopsy.


Comments

12 responses to “Month 14”

  1. So sad to read the last update. One would hope such big PSA reduction you managed has to be backed up by something real. What does it tell us? PSA is unreliable in AS or you managed one big PSA masking and MRI likewise unreliable. I then question how AS can be successful as it lagerly depends on hit or miss biopsy every 3 years.

    1. I don’t know. The original lesion appears to have broken apart. Did I cause that to happen, or would it have happened anyway? Did the first biopsy make it happen? It is better to have it broken apart so whatever I am doing can attack it better on the surfaces, or is it just spreading and more plentiful in my prostate? I did get the first biopsy report, and there was nerve invasion already, so that is not progression.

      I am going to keep up the diet and get more testing as the insurance will allow. I doubt I will get surgery or radiation. They are both too debilitating and I have an active lifestyle I just don’t want to give up. There are some other next steps, I am in assessment mode. I haven’t figured out how to measure the punicic acid in my blood. That would be nice to know. I still have no symptoms and probably won’t for a few more years. But quality of life is more important to me than quantity. We will keep going and see what the next round of testing brings.

  2. You write up makes me realise that I would like to know more about cores and the percentages of cell that are cancerous in them. I have this preconceived idea of what a core is, but really nothing to back that up. Do cores have tissue from where they meddle entered the prostate to where the needle stopped being pushed further in? Or are they something less than that? I have an image of a post biopsy prostate with little tunnels through it, as opposed to one with little cylinders of tissue missing from within it.

    Sorry to learn that you had that news (bad news). Glad to hear your symptom are not affecting your lifestyle.

    1. Cores are cylinders of tissue that extracted from the body. Those spaces removed gets filled in with nearby tissue. My results really weren’t that bad. I was hoping for a reversal of PCa tissue percentages based on the lowering of the PSA score. I busted up the one lesion, or it broke on it’s own, I can’t get an opinion on that. We will see what the next round of tests bring, and I need to find ways to up my game and create other alternatives. I had one score go from 10% grade 4 to 20% grade 4. That was the worst of it. I was hoping to wipe the Grade 4 out completely, but not yet.

  3. Michael Avatar
    Michael

    Hi Following your journey with great interest. Wish you the best of luck. Question: Have You Tried Fasting for 72 hours?

    1. not yet. 72 hours. I will have to give it a try. Thanks!

  4. Following your journey closely. Any input on Reservatrol?

    1. I like it and keep using it in conjunction with Quercetin.

  5. Try boron supplementation.

    https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/14713551/

    … Serum PSA levels decreased by 88.6% and 86.4%, respectively, as compared to the control group. …

    1. Thanks. I will take a look

  6. Thank you for your honest posts with lots of exciting info.
    Here’s some extras from my research for consideration….
    Iodine – Anti Stress Measures – Breathing – Alkalising
    – living inland and vegetarian we used to think we were getting enough iodine from foods like dairy but turns out that was true in past because churns and cows teats used to be disinfected with iodine!
    A very high percentage of advanced mixed cancer patients were found to be severely deficient in a small study. (There’s not much research on iodine specifically for pca more in breast cancer.) Now we use kelp. ( not that husband’s advanced pca found late is under good control but it makes sense not to be deficient)
    Not many studies but some pointers.
    Shame it’s so expensive – and time consuming! – to get all the nutrients in nowadays –
    Stress – Ornish had their plant based trial participants do an hour a day of some form of meditation or deep relaxation! see Greger video too. Small and often doing some form of skilled relaxation through day including beathing exercises for oxygenation – Buteyko etc
    Alkalising – central to many complementary therapies, for research see Hiromi Wada and his team’s work. Keeping urine ph above 7 or 7.5 – 8 was associated with best outcomes.
    (urine ph used as a surrogate marker using test strips – can also test saliva(
    And then there’s the exercise….
    Alll these things mean it can be a demanding full time job really – except money out not in! stressful trying to keep up with it all….
    As pca is heterogenous if only treatment focussed on examining reasons it arose with testing and questions as to why this particular person has this – whether viruses, mitochondria, deficiencies, excesses, stress, genes etc etc etc. Treating the person with a truly personalised approach. The tests would likely cost a fortune for an individual.
    All best – some great work here

    1. thanks for all your information.

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