Androgen depletion and repletion as a means of potentiating the effect of cytotoxic chemotherapy in advanced prostate cancer.
Publication/Presentation Date
1-1-1987
Abstract
Seventy-five patients with stage D-2 prostate cancer refractory to orchiectomy have been entered in a controlled trial to test whether androgen priming enhances the efficacy of chemotherapy. All patients are treated with aminoglutethimide and hydrocortisone as a means of achieving medical adrenalectomy and are given cyclic i.v. chemotherapy with cytoxan, adriamycin and 5-fluorouracil. Patients in the stimulation arm (N = 39) receive, in addition, fluoxymesterone (5 mg p.o. b.i.d.) for 3 days before and on the day of chemotherapy. A similar response rate was observed in the stimulation and control arm (83% vs 74% respectively) when the analysis was restricted to evaluable patients. When all patients were included, a significantly higher response rate was observed in the control arm (64% vs 49%, P less than 0.05) as a result of the larger fraction of unevaluable patients in the stimulation arm (41% vs 14%). Median duration of response is 9 months in the stimulation and 10 months in the control arm. Median overall survival in the stimulation and control group is 12 months and 16 months respectively. Significant toxicity consisting of exacerbation of bone pain and, in two patients, development of reversible spinal cord compression was observed following androgen priming. Our results suggest that combined medical adrenalectomy and chemotherapy are highly effective in the treatment of advanced prostate cancer. Thus far, no additional benefit has been observed with androgen priming.
Volume
27
Issue
1-3
First Page
551
Last Page
556
ISSN
0022-4731
Published In/Presented At
Manni, A., Santen, R. J., Boucher, A. E., Lipton, A., Harvey, H., Simmonds, M., Gordon, R., Rohner, T., Drago, J., & Wettlaufer, J. (1987). Androgen depletion and repletion as a means of potentiating the effect of cytotoxic chemotherapy in advanced prostate cancer. Journal of steroid biochemistry, 27(1-3), 551–556. https://doi.org/10.1016/0022-4731(87)90353-0
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
3695494
Department(s)
Department of Surgery
Document Type
Article