Hi, and welcome. Hope that you find some helpful information here. If you are like many men, right now you are "drinking from a firehose." I hope to help...
One thing to very clearly understand is how your "risk" is categories by the NCCN, National Comprehensive Cancer Network (they are the people who publish the "standards of care").
Based on the initial info, you sound like you might be low-risk or very low risk. Here's the NCCN definitions:
Patients in the low-risk category are those with a stage T1-T2a tumor, a Gleason score of 2-6, and a PSA level less than 10 ng/mL, whereas very-low-risk patients are those with a stage T1a tumor, a Gleason score of 6 or less, a PSA level less than 10 ng/mL, fewer than three positive biopsy cores with no more than 50% cancer in each, and a PSA density below 0.15 ng/mL per gram.
How many biopsy cores had cancer, and what percentage of cancer were found in those cores that had cancer?Understanding your "risk" category is an important first step to determining whether treatment is necessary/appropriate, and if so, what treatment. best wishes...