By Howard Wolinsky
You may have read something about the debate to renameGleason 6 as a non-cancer.
The ACtiveSurveillor.com has contributed to the debate. In fact, I am a co-author with several researchers of a report in a major medical journal, calling for cancer to be dropped from Gleason 6 diagnosis.
Why? The cancer diagnosis can cause anxiety and depression that can lead patients to not go on to active surveillance or to leave it because of cancerphobia. These patients can’t live with their cancer and want it out—STAT.
The cancer diagnosis also can lead to financial toxicity, such as canceled insurance policies or sky-high rate increases. But happened to me.
So I ran a small survey on what the cancerless Gleason 6 should be called.
The response was underwhelming. So I didn’t bother to report it out. But a reader asked me to share results from this unscientific survey.
Here goes:
The majority of you (55%) favor renaming Gleason 6 as a non-cancer. 45% can live with the cancer diagnosis.
What to call it?
The most popular choice (45%) is age-related prostatic neoplasia or ARPN. This came from Dr. Bert Vorstman, the uro-skeptic. My blog about Bert has drawn nearly 2,000 views, about 1,000 more than any other to date.
(Read Bert’s critique of AS and more here: https://howardwolinsky.substack.com/publish/post/53603932) The newsletter has about 350 “subscribers.”
About 18% each of respondents said they preferred calling Gleason 6 a “precancer” or “dysplasia,” an abnormal growth.
No one voted for lameoidenoma or wimpoidenoma, names I jokingly proposed based on references my doctors have made to my so-called cancer. Dr. George Lundberg, a pathologist and former editor of the Journal of the American Medical Association, also got a goose egg for “incidentaloma,” meaning an abnormality that was an incidental finding.
Readers proposed “precancerous spot” and “NCS (not clinically significant).”
A patient with a Gleason 8 proposed his cancer be named: “SGW—self gone wild.”
One respondent said he finds cancer acceptable. “I'm good with the name and stress, for myself, the Active part of Active Surveillance.”
Along these lines, some opponents of dropping cancer fear that many patients and their docs will avoid careful monitoring if the “The Big C” moniker is deleted.
For now, I’ll leave the survey open. You can vote at: https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/N2V2KTJ
DO NOT BE ALARMED
I never intended to charge for subscriptions. I promised free forever. That’s not changing.
But several of you have offered to “subscribe” because they felt they are getting something of value from this newsletter. I have heard from people whose lives have been impacted with the active surveillance (AS) approach to low-risk to favorable intermediate-risk prostate cancer.
So I am experimenting with a donation plan. Substack, the software provider, skims about 10% of any payment, for any money that comes in. Seems fair.
I activated the payment option. But don’t pay if you don’t want to, or pay as much or as little as you wish. Frankly, I’m not sure if this option working at all.
Like the low-risk prostate cancer management approach of AS, TheActiveSurveillor.com newsletter has been growing rapidly.
In a matter of months, we’re up to 350 "free “subscriptions,” and up to 2,000 views per article, and a nearly 70% “open rate,” which indicates the newsletter is reaching right audience.
I don’t have to write as much as I do. But remember, I was a daily newspaper reporter for about 50 years. Our motto? “Journalists do it daily.” That includes medical journos.
I actually don’t post here every day—just as I see fit. I know that’s more than some of you like because you don’t want to be reminded of your cancers. But some of you do. So I leave it up to you.
My advice: If you feel like you’re being barraged with articles, feel free to skim or ignore them. Please don’t unsubscribe. Let me know.
I am passionate about the topic of active surveillance. I have been on it for nearly 12 years, and next year will observe my “pros mitzvah.” I know that 40% of patients like us are undergoing unnecessary treatments, including radical prostatectomy and radiation therapy.
I am starting to go into the red on this newsletter experiment. I have administrative expenses of about $500/month, including paying to have interviews transcribed, which helps my workflow.
I also have lost opportunity expenses. My choice.
Often, I opt to write for the newsletter and take a pass on paid work, a loss of about $1,500 to $2,000 or more per month.
I plan to keep going with TheActiveSurveillor.com until I get tired of doing it.
I don’t have Active Surveillor “office hours.” But I can spend an hour or two per day chatting with fellow Surveillors who drop in. I spend more time speaking with these guys in a week than I did in 10 years of teaching journalism grad students at Northwestern University, DePaul University and the University of Chicago combined.
Mi offina es tu offina.
If you have any questions, contact me at howard.wolinsky@gmail.com I am always looking for you to write about your experiences and opinions. We’ve gotten some great ones on diets, genetic testing in very low-risk cancer, and Dr. Vorstman’s bomb on prostate cancer. Means less work for me.
Can you help me out and sign up for a free AnCan webinar on how lifestyle can affect prostate cancer?
AnCan is presenting a program on lifestyle choices and all grades of prostate cancer at 8-9:30 p.m. Eastern on May 31. Register at: https://bit.ly/3KkxcfC
The webinar, entitled “Optimizing Sleep, Exercise, and Nutrition in Prostate Cancer," features Dr. Stacy Loeb, professor of Urology and Population Health at the New York University School of Medicine and the Manhattan Veterans Affairs Medical Center, and Dr. Justin Gregg, assistant professor of Urology and Health Disparities Research at UT MD Anderson Cancer Center, of UT MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston.
Did you miss the best program on AS to date: “Your Voice in the future of Active Surveillance,” on April 22.? Here’s the link: https://aspatients.org/meeting-videos/
A Who’s Who of experts joined the conversation along with patients and advocates, who were not too shabby either.
Active Surveillance Patients International and the AnCan Virtual Support Group for AS are teaming up for a program on BPH, an enlarged prostate, a not uncommon problem in patients on AS.
It’s a drop-in First Wednesday meeting. Go here for directions to the Barniskis Room to attend the free program, featuring BPH guru, Dr. Steven Kaplan, of Mount Sinai in NYC. Drop in at: ancan.org/barniskis
How about “benign prostatic neoplasia” (or BPN) to differentiate it from benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) since Gleason 6 is some kind of abnormal growth that typically does not progress like cancer.
Good to know! Feel better about it now