Prostate cancer

Prostate cancer is the most common male cancer in the UK, with more than 34,000 men diagnosed each year. For many, there are no symptoms of prostate cancer.

In recent years, there have been important advances in assessments for prostate cancer and at Birmingham Prostate Clinic, our focus is upon a personalised understanding of your individual prostate cancer risk.

How does prostate cancer develop?

Cancer in the prostate, like cancer in other parts of the body, starts with changes in a single cell or group of cells. Normally, the growth of cells is carefully controlled and as cells die, they are replaced in an orderly fashion. When cancer develops, the cells lose this important control system and suddenly multiply creating a mass of abnormal cells cancer cells, called a tumour. These cancer cells can invade and destroy tissue surrounding them.

It is important to emphasise that not all prostate cancers are the same. In some people, especially older men, prostate cancer will be slow-growing and unlikely to spread during the individual’s lifetime. However, some men will develop a more aggressive, fast-growing prostate cancer which, left untreated, will spread and become life-threatening.

Men with the condition often have no symptoms of prostate cancer and there is no screening programme in the UK. This means that some men with fast-growing cancers are not diagnosed in time for curative treatment, leading to 10,000 deaths a year.

Prostate cancer risk

We do not know exactly why some men develop prostate cancer and others do not, but it is clear that both genetic and lifestyle factors are significant. On average, the overall risk of developing prostate cancer at some stage during your lifetime is one in 12. Risk factors for prostate cancer include:

Age

The older men get, the more likely they are to develop cancer in their prostate.

Ethnicity

Afro-Caribbean men are at higher risk than Caucasians and men from the Far East have a lower risk for cancer. BPC has recently worked with the organisers of Black History Month to produce dedicated information about prostate cancer risk for black men.

Obesity

This is understood to influence the type of prostate cancer you may develop, increasing your risk of having more aggressive forms of the disease.

Diet

Studies show there is a link between diet and prostate cancer risk.