Prostate cancer is a very common condition. It's the most common cancer in American men and about one in eight men will be affected with it in their lifetimes. You have a tumor inside the prostate gland. The prostate gland doesn't have much function but it does seem to go haywire in men. Most men who get prostate cancer are in their 50s or 60s but it can go up to your 70s or 80s. The treatments for prostate cancer include active surveillance so for some low grade patients we could just watch them and that's probably the safest for that group of patients. For patients with more aggressive prostate cancers their options can include prostate surgery which is usually done robotically here as well as radiation therapy. We have a number of radiation therapy options that we work closely with our radiation therapy colleagues and then there's chemotherapy and hormonal therapy for advanced prostate cancer. Most patients who have prostate cancer don't have any symptoms and a lot of it is detected based on annual screening PSA level. That's a blood test that can be used to help detect that. The digital rectal exam can also be help. We often the full spectrum of prostate cancer care. We have two specialist medical oncologists as well as a specialist radiation oncologist who specializes in neurologic cancer. So as a team we function very well together and are very collaborative.