Chapter 7 of ProstateScan 2026:
REFRAMING PROSTATE CANCER THROUGH EVIDENCE, QUALITY OF LIFE, AND PRECISION-GUIDED CARE
Insights from Dr. Alex Van Hoof
For decades, prostate cancer has been defined—and treated—through the lens of hormonal suppression. Yet as research advances and clinical experience deepens, a more nuanced picture is emerging—one that balances tumor biology, patient quality of life, and precision-guided innovation. According to Dr. Alex Van Hoof, a clinician deeply engaged in prostate cancer research and education, the field is undergoing a quiet but meaningful transformationDr. Van Hoof points to the historical foundations of prostate cancer care, dating back to the landmark discoveries of Huggins and Hodges in the 1940s, which established androgen deprivation as a powerful means of controlling disease progression. That principle remains valid today—but its application has grown more sophisticated. Modern care now recognizes that while androgen signaling drives progression in established cancer, prostate cancer itself is initiated by genetic and molecular changes long before hormones become dominant players.
One of the most significant recent shifts, Dr. Van Hoof notes, is the growing use of intensified combination therapy in men diagnosed with high-risk disease. Large trials such as STAMPEDE have demonstrated that adding advanced androgen receptor pathway inhibitors (ARPIs) to traditional androgen deprivation therapy and radiation can substantially improve overall survival and metastasis-free survival. What was once applied to a minority of patients is rapidly becoming standard practice for a majority, reflecting a recalibration of how aggressively clinicians intervene earlier in the disease course.
Yet progress is not limited to escalation. Dr. Van Hoof emphasizes that innovation in prostate cancer also involves re-examining long-held assumptions, particularly around hormones themselves. One of the most provocative areas of ongoing research involves testosterone replacement therapy (TRT) in select men who have undergone definitive treatment for localized prostate cancer. Historically viewed as contraindicated, TRT is now being studied as a potential quality-of-life intervention in carefully selected patients.This evolving conversation has been championed by Dr. Abraham (Abe) Morgentaler, a urologist and researcher whose work has challenged the dogma that any testosterone exposure is inherently dangerous in men with a history of prostate cancer. Dr. Morgentaler’s research has helped clarify the concept of a saturation model, suggesting that once androgen receptors are maximally stimulated, additional testosterone may not further fuel cancer growth. While not applicable to men with active or advanced disease, this research has opened doors for survivors struggling with fatigue, cognitive decline, and sexual dysfunction after curative therapy.
What unites these advances, Dr. Van Hoof suggests, is a growing respect for individualized decision-making. Prostate cancer is no longer treated as a monolithic disease but as a spectrum of biologically distinct conditions requiring tailored strategies. The challenge for clinicians is not simply choosing the most powerful therapy, but selecting the right therapy for the right patient at the right time.
In this evolving landscape, education plays a critical role. As Dr. Van Hoof’s insights reveal, today’s “standard of care” is increasingly defined not by rigid protocols, but by adaptive frameworks that integrate biology, imaging, genetics, and patient priorities. Prostate cancer care, once dominated by suppression alone, is now entering an era defined by balance, precision, and informed restraint.
FROM THE SOURCE
Alexander Van Hoof, MD, is a clinical researcher in urology with a focused expertise in prostate cancer, bladder cancer, and renal cancer. With more than a decade of experience in medical and clinical trial research, his work spans urologic oncology, evidence generation, and translational science. Through extensive academic involvement—including scientific writing, abstracts, and publications—Dr. Van Hoof has developed strong proficiency in interpreting complex medical data and effectively disseminating it to diverse clinical audiences. He has presented research findings to physicians and key opinion leaders at national medical conferences, earning recognition for clarity and impact. His clinical training as a medical doctor, combined with hands-on experience in clinical trials, has provided firsthand insight into how cutting-edge research and emerging technologies meaningfully affect patients and their families. Dr. Van Hoof is particularly passionate about leveraging his expertise in medical affairs and alues interdisciplinary collaboration, mentorship, and lifelong learning as essential drivers of progress in modern cancer care.
Part 2:
Imaging as the Unifying Force across Standard Therapies
By Robert L. Bard, MD, DABR, FAIUM, FASLMS
Cancer Radiologist | Diagnostic Imaging Specialist
Prostate cancer care has evolved into a highly structured, evidence-based continuum—one that balances disease biology, patient risk stratification, and quality-of-life considerations. Across decades of clinical observation and imaging-based assessment, it is clear that no single therapy stands alone. Instead, modern prostate cancer management is defined by appropriate treatment selection, timely intervention, and objective monitoring, all anchored by diagnostic imaging.
As a cancer radiologist specializing in advanced diagnostic imaging, my role is not to replace standard therapies, but to corroborate, validate, and refine them. Imaging serves as the common language that links surveillance, intervention, and follow-up—ensuring that treatment decisions align with tumor behavior rather than assumptions alone.
Risk Stratification and the Foundation of Care
Current standards of prostate cancer treatment appropriately rely on risk group classification, clinical staging, PSA kinetics, Gleason grading, and overall patient health. These variables determine whether a patient is best served by conservative monitoring or active intervention.
Imaging has become indispensable in this process. High-resolution ultrasound, multiparametric MRI, PET-based tracers, and Doppler vascular assessment now provide real-time insights into tumor location, aggressiveness, vascularity, and response to therapy—allowing clinicians to act with precision rather than excess.
Primary Treatments (Localized / Curative Intent)
Active Surveillance and Watchful Waiting: For patients with low-risk, slow-growing prostate cancer, active surveillance remains a clinically sound and patient-centered strategy. Imaging plays a critical role in this pathway by confirming disease stability, detecting subtle progression, and reducing unnecessary biopsies or premature treatment. Surveillance is not passive—it is data-driven vigilance.
Surgery: Radical Prostatectomy- Radical prostatectomy remains a cornerstone curative option, particularly for localized disease in otherwise healthy patients. Preoperative imaging assists in surgical planning, margin assessment, and lymph node evaluation, while postoperative imaging helps identify recurrence early, should PSA levels rise.
- External Beam Radiation Therapy (EBRT)
- Intensity-Modulated Radiation Therapy (IMRT)
- Brachytherapy (radioactive seed implantation)
In addition, proton therapy and CyberKnife® stereotactic radiosurgery represent highly refined radiation approaches. Proton therapy allows for targeted dose delivery with reduced collateral tissue exposure, while CyberKnife uses robotic X-ray guidance for sub-millimeter accuracy. Imaging is essential in treatment planning, targeting, and post-therapy assessment for all radiation modalities.
Advanced or Recurrent Disease Treatments
Hormone Therapy (Androgen Deprivation Therapy – ADT)
Hormone therapy remains foundational in advanced, recurrent, or metastatic prostate cancer. Agents such as Lupron®, Firmagon®, and Orgovyx® suppress testosterone signaling to slow disease progression. Imaging helps determine treatment response, detect castration-resistant changes, and guide escalation or combination strategies.
Chemotherapy: Systemic agents such as docetaxel and cabazitaxel are used when prostate cancer spreads or becomes resistant to hormone therapy. Imaging evaluates disease burden, tracks metastatic spread, and informs timing and effectiveness of chemotherapy interventions.
Targeted Therapy: The emergence of genetically targeted therapies, including PARP inhibitors like olaparib, has introduced a new level of personalization. Imaging complements genomic testing by demonstrating phenotypic response and guiding treatment continuation or adjustment.
Immunotherapy: Immunotherapeutic approaches such as Sipuleucel-T represent an important option for select patients. While immune response may not always be immediately reflected in PSA changes, imaging provides objective insight into disease stabilization or progression.
Radiopharmaceutical Therapy: Radium-223 is a targeted radiopharmaceutical used specifically for prostate cancer metastases to bone. Imaging is critical in identifying appropriate candidates, monitoring skeletal response, and distinguishing therapeutic benefit from disease-related bone changes.
Ablative and Supportive Treatment Modalities
Cryotherapy and HIFU: Minimally invasive ablative techniques such as cryotherapy and high-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) are increasingly utilized in focal therapy or salvage settings. Imaging ensures accurate targeting, confirms tissue ablation, and monitors adjacent structures.
Bone-Targeted Therapy: For patients with bone metastases, bisphosphonates and denosumab are essential for skeletal protection and pain management. Imaging tracks bone integrity, fracture risk, and therapeutic response.
Imaging as the Integrator of Prostate Cancer Care
Across all treatment categories—whether curative, systemic, or palliative—diagnostic imaging serves as the objective validator. It informs when to treat, how aggressively to intervene, and when to adjust course. Imaging transforms prostate cancer care from protocol-driven to precision-guided, reducing overtreatment while safeguarding against missed progression.
The future of prostate cancer management lies not in choosing one therapy over another, but in intelligent integration—where surgery, radiation, hormone therapy, systemic agents, and emerging technologies are applied in harmony, guided by accurate, real-time diagnostic insight.
Closing Perspective
Modern prostate cancer care is robust, multidisciplinary, and continually advancing. Current standards—from active surveillance to proton therapy, CyberKnife, systemic treatments, and supportive care—are well-founded and effective when applied appropriately. Diagnostic imaging stands at the center of this ecosystem, ensuring that every decision is informed, justified, and aligned with the patient’s unique disease profile.
In prostate cancer, seeing clearly is not optional—it is essential.











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