Treatment Terms
| Professional Term | Meaning |
| Adjuvant hormonal therapy | Therapy that is given immediately after surgery or radiation in order to destroy cancer cells that may remain anywhere in the body after these procedures |
| Androgens | Hormones that produce the sexual physical characteristics of men (such as deep voice and facial hair). The main male androgen is testosterone |
| Antiandrogens | Drugs that fight prostate cancer by blocking the action of testosterone. These drugs are given as a pill |
| Bilateral orchiectomy | Surgical removal of both testes, which results in castration |
| Biological therapy | Treatment to stimulate or restore the ability of the immune system to fight infection and disease |
| Brachytherapy | A procedure in which tiny "seeds" made up of radioactive material are placed directly into the prostate |
| Castration | Treatment that suppresses testosterone. Castration can be achieved surgically (orchiectomy) or medically (using an LHRA-A) |
| Chemotherapy | Treatment with anticancer drugs that attack the cancer cells but may harm certain types of healthy cells |
| Combined hormonal therapy | Combining 2 types of hormonal therapy-a pill (an antiandrogen) and an injection (an LHRH-A) |
| Cryotherapy | Repeated freezing and thawing of tumor cells, which result in cell death |
| External beam radiation | Radiation therapy that uses a machine to direct high-energy rays at a certain part of the body where cancer has been detected |
| Hormonal therapy | In prostate cancer, treatment that interferes with the production of and block male hormones (such as testosterone) that promote the growth of tumors |
| Luteinizing hormone (LH) | A substance produced by the pituitary gland in the brain that stimulates the secretion of sex hormones in men and women |
| Luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone | A hormone secreted by a part of the brain (hypothalamus) that trigger the release of LH |
| Luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone analog (LHRH-A) | Drugs that treat prostate cancer by keeping the testes from producing testosterone. These drugs are typically given as an injection |
| medical oncologist | A doctor who specializes in diagnosing and treating cancer using chemotherapy, hormone therapy, or biological therapy |
| Neoadjuvant hormonal therapy | Therapy that is given before surgery or radiation in order to improve the results of these procedures |
| Palliative therapy | Therapy that is given to provide symptom relief but is not intended to cure the disease or extend life |
| Prognosis | A prediction that is made about the potential outcome of a disease |
| Prostatectomy | An operation to remove part or all of the prostate |
| Radiation oncologist | A doctor who specializes in using radiation to treat cancer |
| Radiation therapy | Treatment for prostate cancer that uses radiation to kill cancer cells and shrink tumors |
| Radical prostatectomy | An operation to remove the entire prostate and some of the tissue around it |
| Recurrence | When a cancer returns a the same site as the original tumor or another location, after it had disappeared |
| Systemic therapy | Treatment using medicines that travel through the blood to reach cells throughout the body |
| Urologist | A doctor who specializes in diseases of the urinary and sex organ in males and the urinary organs in females |
| Watchful waiting | Closely monitoring a patient's condition without treatment, using regular digital rectal exams and PSA blood tests; also called observation or surveillance |
