ANNOUNCER: The main symptom of bone metastases is pain which can often be confused with arthritis pain in elderly patients.
DEREK RAGHAVAN, MD, PhD: As a general rule, arthritic pain is localized to a joint. So it'll be the knee, the hip, the elbow, something like that. Where mostly metastatic pain is within the actual bony tissue. It ultimately requires a relatively high level of clinical skill to identify the difference between arthritis type pain and metastasis type pain.
PAUL MATHEW, MD: Pain medications will form the centerpiece of managing any patient with malignant pain, whether it's bony or otherwise. And I think the pain can be particularly severe on occasion.
ANNOUNCER: Prostate cancer patients with bone complications do have several treatment options to discuss with their doctor.
DEREK RAGHAVAN, MD, PhD: Prostate cancer is driven by a male hormone or male chemical called testosterone. For the bone complications themselves if you effect a castration, meaning if you use any of the chemical or surgical ways of stopping testosterone production, in about 80% of patients that will cause the bone metastases to shrink and will put them into remission.
PAUL MATHEW, MD: Radiation therapy is generally reserved for patients who have painful metastases to bone that are threatening pathological fracture or a spinal cord compression.
ANNOUNCER: A more common treatment option involves drugs called bisphosphonates.