Yes, as long as you have prostate cancer indicated, Medicare will cover the Lupron injection in the doctors office
Lupron is prescribed by doctors for the treatment of the symptoms of prostate cancer in men. The drug does not treat the cancer itself but can help to alleviate the associated symptoms.
There are no current medications to treat prostate cancer, but some good ones are in testing. Current medications only prolong the life by a few months of men with advanced prostate cancer. Currently, prostate cancer is treated by surgery and chemotherapy along with a prostate healthy diet.
Lupron injections usually last about 3 months, and 2 injections are usually given in sequence for endometriosis treatment. You will likely not have a period for at least 6 months, and sometimes it can take a few months to become regular after the medication has left your system.
Yes, if you do the drug search, many different doses show up
first a little history, I have recurrent prostate cancer. I am receiving lupron depot shots every 4 months. I just had som lab done and my Neutrophils are low at 39 and the monocytes are high at 15. should i be concerned.
Yes. I have it now and I'm on Lupron.
96402 for the injection and J9217 for the actual Lupron
In J code, lupron stimulation testing can be represented with J9217, which is used to bill for Leuprolide Acetate for depot suspension for injection. This code can be used when Lupron is administered as part of the stimulation testing procedure.
J9217
J9217
is a treatment option that may be less traumatic than RP and appears to have similar results when used in early-stage patients. Radiation also produces side effects, including impotence, in about half of patients. It can be applied through an external beam that directs the dose to the prostate from outside the body. FDA also has cleared low-dose radioactive "seeds," each about the size of a grain of rice, that are implanted within the prostate to kill cancer cells locally. Called brachytherapy, the seeding technique is sometimes combined with external-beam radiation for a "one-two punch." Studies done at the Georgia Center for Prostate Cancer Research and Treatment show that 68 percent of men treated with both radiation methods applied simultaneously are cancer free 10 years after treatment." , in which prostate tumors are killed by freezing, shows encouraging early results. But some medical professionals consider it experimental with not enough long-term data yet to determine its effectiveness. is often used in all phases of prostate cancer treatment to help block production or action of the male hormones that have been shown to fuel prostate cancer. Among widely used approved hormone blockers, often used in combination, are Lupron (leuprolide acetate), Casodex (bicalutamide), Eulexin (flutamide), Nilandron (nilutamide), and Zoladex (goserelin acetate implant). Because the testicles produce male hormones, some men also undergo testicle removal to cut off the hormone supply. Advanced prostate cancer patients are usually treated with any number of chemotherapeutic drugs such as Novantrone (mitoxantrone), which do not cure the disease but often do ease pain and other symptoms. [from Federal Citizen Information Center (FCIC) - Understanding Prostate Changes: A Health Guide For All Men]
About 4 to 6 weeks.