4.1 Article

Therapeutic Options for Advanced Prostate Cancer: 2011 Update

Journal

CURRENT UROLOGY REPORTS
Volume 13, Issue 2, Pages 170-178

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11934-012-0239-z

Keywords

Prostate cancer; Castrate-resistant prostate cancer; CRPC; Docetaxel; Cabazitaxel; Abiraterone; Radium-223; Sipuleucel-T; Denosumab; Circulating tumor cells; CTC; Biomarker; Update

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Up to 40% of male patients diagnosed with prostate cancer develop metastatic disease that generally responds to initial chemical or surgical castration, but this eventually progresses despite castrate levels of testosterone, termed castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC). A large phase 3 trial of abiraterone acetate in patients who have progressed following docetaxel based chemotherapy were published in 2011 and dramatically proved that CRPC is still androgen-dependant and responds to CYP17 inhibition. Overall survival benefits were also reported for a novel tubulin-binding drug, cabazitaxel, tested as second-line chemotherapy after docetaxel failure; for sipuleucel-T, an autologous dendritic cell therapy, in chemotherapy-naive patients; for MDV3100, a novel antiandrogen, and for radium-223, which is a bone-seeking a-irradiation-emitting radioisotope. Denosumab, a monoclonal antibody against receptor activator of nuclear factor-kB ligand, was shown to be superior to zoledronic acid for prevention of skeletal-related events in prostate cancer patients with metastatic bone disease. This review will focus on the recent developments in the field of CRPC.

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