CASA Website > Avmed > Guidelines > Prostate Cancer
Prostate Cancer
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Aeromedical Implications
Effect of aviation on condition
- Fatigue and jet lag will tend to aggravate any adverse effects of radiotherapy and chemotherapeutic agents
- Hypoxia - lowers seizure threshold and thus risk from cerebral secondaries
Effect of condition on aviation
- Overt incapacitation
- pain from bony metastasis
- pain from acute bladder obstruction
- neurologic deficits from spinal cord compression
- lower extremity pain and oedema due to obstruction of venous and lymphatic tributaries by nodal metastasis
- Subtle incapacitation
- depression and affective disorders
Effect of treatment on aviation
- Medication side-effects
- Distraction due to treatment & symptoms eg pain and nausea
- distraction due to urinary incontinence secondary to prostate surgery
- distraction due to rectal irritation secondary to radiotherapy
Approach to medical certification
Based on the condition
- absence of symptoms / complications
- in remission / acceptable staging
- acceptable biochemical and haematological parameters
Based on Treatment
- Absence of significant side-effects
- rectal irritation
- adverse effects of androgen suppression
Demonstrated Stability
- Stability of treatment and condition confirmed for the period of certification
- May include interim surveillance eg review of PSAs by DAME
Risk assessment protocol - Information required
New cases
- Confirmed diagnosis
- Clinical status
- Presenting symptoms/signs
- Progress
- Investigations conducted (if performed)
- Results of staging investigations/histology
- Collated PSA
- Biopsy results
- Percentage of biopsy cores positive for cancer
- Gleason score
- Surgical report
- Clinical tumour stage
- Involved margins/ Extra-prostatic involvement
- Gleason score
- Imaging for metastasis
- Bone scan
- CT scan of the abdomen and pelvis
- Follow-up investigations
- Management
- treatment and response (if performed)
- Radical prostatectomy
- Radiation therapy
- Active surveillance
- Androgen deprivation therapy (ADT)
- side-effects
- Current state of continence
- Rectal complications
- Adverse effects of androgen suppression
- Monitoring
- Prognosis
- Risk of possible future recurrence
- What are the likely clinical presentations of recurrence?
- Could this be accompanied by incapacitating symptoms?
- Could a recurrence be detected before symptoms occur by increasing the frequency of radiological, haematological or other surveillance?
- Follow-up plan
Renewal
- Clinical status
- any symptoms/signs
- progress (as indicated by serial PSA’s)
Additional information as required:
- Investigations conducted (if performed)
- Management
- treatment and response (if performed)
- side-effects
- current state of continence
- rectal complications
- adverse effects of androgen suppression (e.g. mood, glucose intolerance)
- monitoring
- Prognosis
- Risk of possible future recurrence
- What are the likely clinical presentations of recurrence?
- Could this be accompanied by incapacitating symptoms?
- Could a recurrence be detected before symptoms occur by increasing the frequency of radiological, haematological or other surveillance?
- Follow up plan
Indicative outcomes
- Audit requirements will apply as follows:
- Successful and definitive prostate cancer treatment - 5 years.
- People who are being monitored without treatment - ongoing
- Metastatic prostate cancer in remission - ongoing
- Hormonal treatment has multiple side-effects and may require additional reports and testing
Favourable
- Prostate cancer - successfully treated or localised and stable PSA
- No significant consequences of treatment
Unfavourable
- Metastatic cancers
- Unstable cancers requiring radiotherapy or chemotherapy
- Adverse effects of androgen suppression
Pilot Information
- Any relapse mandates grounding and must be reported to the DAME or CASA
- Any change of treatment mandates grounding and must be reported to the DAME
- Side effects of erectile dysfunction medications can be aero-medically significant
- Prostate biopsy may be complicated by bleeding, infection and urinary obstruction
- Most obstructions occur in the first few hours after the procedure, however there are instances where it has occurred up to 5 days later
- Grounding for 5 days post procedure is required to reduce the risk of in-flight incapacitation
Disclaimer
The Clinical Practice Guideline is provided by way of guidance only and subject to the Clinical practice guidelines disclaimer