Posted 6/8/2018 12:38 PM (GMT -5)
Statistically, a person that has one cancer is at greater risk to have another cancer than people that don’t have any cancer. Since PCa, bladder and colon cancer are common in men, often a man will have multiple cancers. My brother in law was treated 6 years ago for PCa. Then two years later he had bladder cancer. He was a long term smoker which is often the cause of bladder cancer in men. His doctor said the two cancers were totally unrelated.
And a second cancer is not a secondary cancer, so be careful with their terms.
Often men are worried about treatment induced cancer when considering radiation therapy. That risk is actually lower than dying from complications of PCa surgery. A recent study of more than 400 men in Skandanavia shouted the occurrence to be .3% at 10 years post treatment. This is a very small risk that should not prevent a man from considering radiation therapy.