The prostate is a small gland, roughly the size of a walnut, found only in men. It sits just below the bladder and wraps around the tube that carries urine out of the body (the urethra). Its job is to produce a fluid that forms part of semen and helps nourish sperm. Because the urethra passes directly through the prostate, any changes in the prostate, whether from cancer or a simple non cancerous enlargement, tend to show up first as changes in urination. This is why urinary symptoms are usually the first signal that something needs to be checked.
The prostate is made up of millions of cells. Normally, these cells grow, do their job, and are replaced in an orderly way. Cancer begins when some of these cells develop changes that cause them to grow without the usual controls. Over time, these cells multiply and can form a tumour inside the prostate. In most cases, this process is slow. Prostate cancer is one of the few cancers where the disease can take years or even decades to grow to a point where it causes harm. That slow pace is actually what makes early detection through a PSA blood test so valuable, because by the time symptoms appear, the cancer has often been present for a while.
Not always, and this is something worth understanding clearly before you worry too much. Prostate cancer exists on a wide spectrum. Some types are low grade and grow so slowly that they never become a threat during a man’s lifetime. Others are more aggressive and need treatment fairly soon after diagnosis. The role of a biopsy and a Gleason score (explained later in this page) is precisely to tell you which type you have, so that the right decision can be made for your specific situation. Many men are understandably alarmed when they first hear the word cancer. But with prostate cancer, the conversation very often leads to “we can manage this well” rather than “this is an emergency.”
The prostate surrounds the urethra, so changes in urination are usually the first sign that something is different. Symptoms to pay attention to include:
It is worth knowing that these exact same symptoms also appear in a condition called benign prostatic hyperplasia, which is a non cancerous enlargement of the prostate. BPH is extremely common in men above 50 and is not cancer. Having these symptoms does not mean you have prostate cancer. But it does mean a check up is the right next step.
In more advanced cases where the cancer has moved beyond the prostate, different symptoms may appear:
These symptoms are less common and are associated with later stage disease. Most men being screened and monitored appropriately will never reach this point.
Here is something that surprises many men: early prostate cancer usually causes no symptoms at all. The tumour is small, still completely inside the prostate, and has not yet pressed on the urethra enough to affect urination. The cancer is silent. This is the single strongest reason why a PSA test matters. It is the only way to find prostate cancer before it starts causing problems. Men above 50, and men above 45 with a family history of prostate cancer, are advised to ask their doctor about PSA screening even when they feel completely healthy.
Every man has some lifetime risk of prostate cancer. But certain factors increase that risk meaningfully. Understanding these helps you decide how proactive to be about screening.
Prostate cancer is rare before the age of 40. The risk rises steadily from 50 onwards, and most diagnoses are made in men between 60 and 75. As men age, the prostate naturally changes, and these age related cellular changes increase the chance of abnormal growth developing over time.
Family history is one of the most important individual risk factors:
One thing that reassures many patients is understanding that diagnosis is a step by step process. You will not leave a first appointment with a treatment plan forced upon you. Everything is investigated in an orderly, careful way.
Staging tells you how far the cancer has grown and whether it has spread beyond the prostate. It directly shapes what treatment is recommended.
Treatment for prostate cancer is not one size fits all. The right plan depends on your stage, your Gleason score, your age, your overall health, and your personal preferences. Here is what the main options involve.
The cost of prostate cancer treatment in Chennai varies based on several factors. There is no single fixed number because each patient's situation is different. The main factors that influence cost include:
As a general principle, early stage prostate cancer treated with surgery or radiation alone tends to be less expensive than advanced stage disease requiring multiple modalities over an extended period. A clear, itemised estimate is provided at the time of consultation once the staging workup is complete.
A PSA test is a simple, quick blood draw. The result is available within a day and gives your doctor a clear starting point. Here is a simple guide on when to consider prostate screening:
Prostate Enlargement Treatment in Chennai is among the most common reasons men see a urologist or oncologist. Many men who come in for enlargement related symptoms are also screened for cancer at the same visit. The two conditions often overlap in terms of symptoms but are managed differently.