Prostate Cancer
Orchidectomy
Prostate cancer relies on the male hormone, testosterone, to enable it to grow. One way of controlling the cancer is to starve it of testosterone. This can either be done medically, using drugs, or surgically by performing an orchidectomy (removal of the testicles). Orchidectomy is not used very often these days because there are hormone treatments available that work in the same way.
Some men prefer this operation to taking medication over a long period of time. Either both testicles are removed completely, or the area of each testicle responsible for testosterone production is cut, so that the two non-functional testicles remain within the scrotum. This operation may be done as a day case with local anaesthetic, or as an inpatient with a spinal or general anaesthetic. The side effects of this operation are similar to those experienced by men on medical hormone treatment (see the 'Side effects of treatments' section).
One man described his orchidectomy as a very minor operation, but another man developed complications and was in hospital for five days. This man, who had a very high PSA level, but who had not had cancer confirmed by biopsy, followed his surgeon's advice to have the orchidectomy, as the most suitable form of treatment. This man still wonders whether or not he has cancer, given that the diagnosis was made on the basis of his raised PSA level alone.
Describes how he found the operation a minor ordeal.
Describes how he found the operation a minor ordeal.
For other men who might be worrying about making that decision was it done with a local anaesthetic, the castration?
Yeah it's a sort of a nothing job really.
Is it?
Yeah
Perhaps you could just tell other men what's it like because they might be worrying about it.
Yeah well I mean there's about three things they give you and you have to make up your mind you know you sort of can't tell anybody else what to do can you but I, you know I thought well I thought if I'd got to go down there every month or something, have injections here and something else I thought if I'm castrated, because if I'd been younger perhaps I wouldn't have done, but it's nothing, it's a nothing job really.
Who does that, do you go to the hospital for that?
They done that at the hospital yeah.
At the hospital
Yeah
Just with a local anaesthetic?
Yeah, you don't know you're having it done really
Really so it didn't take long?
A couple of minutes.
Is it that quick?
Yeah [laughs] it's, because you can't feel no different, you can't feel no different at all. Of course you don't get an erection or anything after, nothing like that you know but...
Are there any other side-effects?
No, no so whether I made the wrong decision or not I don't know but [laughs].
At least you haven't got to have the injections every month then.
No nothing, that was it, that was a one off. If you was castrated that was it. I don't know what else there was, there was injection in there and there was something else, but it was something you'd got to keep, it was something you'd got to keep having done you know. So I took that.
Good.
I made the decision there and then, that's it.
How did your wife feel about that, was that alright for her?
Well as I said we're getting old, we're getting old
So it was alright.
Yeah she, I mean I was over 70 then you know so I thought well
So it was quite an easy decision for you to make
It was quite easy to make yeah.
Good.
If I was younger I might have to think about it a little bit but no it was easy decision to make.
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