C-Reactive Protein (CRP) is an acute phase reactant used as a general marker for inflammation. There is some evidence that elevated levels are associated with increased risk of prostate cancer development, PSA, Gleason score, and decreased response to chemotherapy and radiotherapy (RT). Available literature largely focuses on pre-therapeutic levels as a prognostic marker. We seek to establish whether CRP levels reflect inflammation caused by prostate cancer before and in response to RT with or without prior androgen ablation (AA). This study included 209 patients who had a CBC, PSA, and CRP taken at up to four different time points. Labs were performed prior to AA via leuprolide injection (pre-AA), up to one week prior to RT (pre-RT), during the final week of RT (post-RT), and 3 months following RT completion (FU). Prior to RT, 33% of patients had received prior prostatectomy and 50.7% had received AA. Radiation fields included pelvic lymph nodes in 82% of patients. For comparisons at each time point, CRP had a significant relationship with WBCs pre-AA (p-value = 0.0050), pre-RT (p-value = 0.0170), and post-RT (p-value = 0.0113), but not at FU (p = .096). CRP had no significant relationship with PSA at any time points. For those who did or did not receive AA, pre-RT mean PSA was significantly lower (2.3 vs 5.4, p-value = 0.0072) while CRP was not. Pre-AA, pre-RT, and post-RT CRP levels were not significantly related to FU-PSA. No CRP levels were associated with risk groups. Only PSA significantly changed from pre-AA to pre-RT (p-value<0.0001). PSA, WBCs, and lymphocytes significantly decreased from pre-RT to post-RT, with significant recovery from post-RT to FU (p-value<0.0001 for all six comparisons), though still with overall significant change from pre-RT to FU (p-value = 0.0054, p-value<0.0001, p-value<0.0001, respectively). CRP did not significantly change during any period, nor significantly relate to changes in WBCs or PSA. There was a significant difference between the treated vs. untreated lymph node groups in post-RT lymphocytes (p-value<0.0001), FU-lymphocytes (p-value<0.0001), post-RT-WBCs (p-value = 0.0004), and FU-WBCs (p-value = 0.0141). CRP was not significantly different between these groups. Our results demonstrate a lack of clinical utility for CRP as a marker of the inflammatory effects of prostate cancer. It has no correlation with PSA levels or trends, before or after radiation therapy, with or without androgen ablation. It does not change with significant PSA decrease after androgen ablation and corresponding decrease in cancer activity. It does not change at the end of radiation therapy despite significant changes in lymphocytes and WBCs. It does not change with 3-month follow-up to correspond with either significant recovery of lymphocytes and WBCs or a decrease of radiation-induced inflammation.