Many men stop intimacy once they have been diagnosed with prostate cancer to avoid transmission to their partner.

In response to this question, the German Cancer Information Service confirmed that prostate cancer was not contagious, that is to say that it was was not transmitted to the partner of life.

Prostate cancer is a form of cancer that develops in the prostate, a gland in the male reproductive tract that aids in the formation and storage of sperm in the adult male.

The major risk factors for prostate cancer are age, family history, and obesity. Prostate cancer usually does not cause any symptoms in her first rashes. The symptoms of prostate cancer are frequent urination, especially at night, difficulty urinating, difficulty in maintaining a continuous urine flow, painful urination and the presence of blood in the urine, as well as as problems with sexual intercourse or erectile dysfunction.

These symptoms, because the sooner the disease is diagnosed, the greater the chances of treatment.