From the AJCC 7th edition and
UICC 7th edition. Stage I disease is cancer that is found incidentally in a small part of the sample when prostate tissue is removed for other reasons, such as
benign prostatic hyperplasia, and the cells closely resemble normal cells and the gland feels normal to the examining finger. In Stage II more of the prostate is involved and a lump can be felt within the gland. In Stage III, the tumor has spread through the prostatic capsule and the lump can be felt on the surface of the gland. In Stage IV disease, the tumor has invaded nearby structures or has spread to lymph nodes or other organs. The
Gleason Grading System is based on cellular content and tissue architecture from biopsies, which provides an estimate of the destructive potential and ultimate
prognosis of the disease.
Evaluation of the (primary) tumor ('T') Clinical T stage (cT) •
cTX: cannot evaluate the primary tumor •
cT0: no evidence of tumor •
cT1: tumor present, but not detectable clinically or with imaging •
cT1a: tumor was incidentally found in 5% or less of prostate tissue
resected (for other reasons) •
cT1b: tumor was incidentally found in greater than 5% of prostate tissue resected •
cT1c: tumor was found in a
needle biopsy performed due to an elevated serum
PSA •
cT2: the tumor can be felt (palpated) on examination, but has not spread outside the prostate •
cT2a: the tumor is in half or less than half of one of the prostate gland's two
lobes •
cT2b: the tumor is in more than half of one lobe, but not both •
cT2c: the tumor is in both lobes but within the prostatic capsule within the prostate gland, but nevertheless, definite fat involvement by prostate cancer (as pictures) in a needle biopsy counts as extraprostatic or extracapsular spread. •
cT3: the tumor has spread through the prostatic capsule (if it is only part-way through, it is still
T2) •
cT3a: the tumor has spread through the capsule on one or both sides •
cT3b: the tumor has invaded one or both
seminal vesicles •
cT4: the tumor has invaded other nearby structures It should be stressed that the designation "T2c" implies a tumor which is
palpable in both lobes of the prostate. Tumors which are found to be bilateral on biopsy only but which are not palpable bilaterally should not be staged as T2c.
Pathological T stage (pT) •
pT2: organ confined •
pT2a: unilateral, one-half of one side or less •
pT2b: unilateral, involving more than one-half of side, but not both sides •
pT2c: bilateral disease •
pT3: extraprostatic extension •
pT3a: extraprostatic extension or microscopic invasion of bladder neck •
pT3b: seminal vesicle invasion •
pT4: invasion of rectum, levator muscles, and/or pelvic wall
Evaluation of the regional lymph nodes ('N') •
NX: cannot evaluate the regional lymph nodes •
N0: there has been no spread to the regional lymph nodes •
N1: there has been spread to the regional lymph nodes
Evaluation of distant metastasis ('M') •
MX: cannot evaluate distant metastasis •
M0: there is no distant metastasis •
M1: there is distant metastasis •
M1a: the cancer has spread to lymph nodes beyond the regional ones •
M1b: the cancer has spread to
bone •
M1c: the cancer has spread to other sites (regardless of bone involvement)
Evaluation of the histologic grade ('G') Usually, the
grade of the cancer (how different the tissue is from normal tissue) is evaluated separately from the stage. For prostate cancer, cell morphology is graded based on the
Gleason grading system. Of note, this system of describing tumors as "well-", "moderately-", and "poorly-" differentiated based on
Gleason score of 2–4, 5–6, and 7–10, respectively, persists in
SEER and other databases but is generally outdated. In recent years pathologists rarely assign a tumor a grade less than 3, particularly in biopsy tissue.
Grade Group classification ('GG') A more contemporary reporting standard includes the Grade Groups. For prostate cancer, grade group information and
prostate-specific antigen levels are used in conjunction with TNM status to group cases into four overall stages. ==Whitmore-Jewett staging==