What Happens
Almost all
prostate cancers are discovered in their early stages,
and the 5-year survival rate is almost 100% when the cancer is found at an
early stage.1 The 5-year survival rate is the
percentage of men who are still alive 5 years after they have been diagnosed.
It is just an average. Everyone's case is different, and this number does not
show what will happen in your case.
Prostate cancer is so common that some experts believe that every
man would get it if he lived long enough. Studies of autopsies show that most
men older than 85 who die of other causes have tumors in their
prostates.4 It usually is a very slow-growing cancer
that takes years to grow large enough to cause any problems. Sometimes, though,
it grows quickly.
When prostate cancer spreads, it goes first to surrounding tissues,
then to lymph nodes in the pelvis, and then on to the bones, lungs, or other
organs. For more information, see the topic
Prostate Cancer, Advanced or Metastatic.