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Titration of Androgen Signaling: How Basic Studies Have Informed Clinical Trials Using High-Dose Testosterone Therapy in Castrate-Resistant Prostate Cancer

Journal

LIFE-BASEL
Volume 11, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/life11090884

Keywords

prostate cancer; castrate-resistant prostate cancer; androgens; testosterone; androgen receptor; androgen signaling; bipolar androgen therapy; high testosterone resistance; androgen-independent prostate cancer; clinical trials; human; cancer therapy

Funding

  1. William R. Meyn Foundation
  2. Herbert Crane endowment
  3. Robert Rifkin endowed chair

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Prostate cancer cells titrate androgen signaling to optimize growth, adapting to low levels of androgen which may render the cancer sensitive to restoration of androgens. High-dose testosterone therapy shows potential clinical benefits in a subset of castration-resistant prostate cancer patients.
Since the Nobel Prize-winning work of Huggins, androgen ablation has been a mainstay for treatment of recurrent prostate cancer. While initially effective for most patients, prostate cancers inevitably develop the ability to survive, grow, and metastasize further, despite ongoing androgen suppression. Here, we briefly review key preclinical studies over decades and include illustrative examples from our own laboratories that suggest prostate cancer cells titrate androgen signaling to optimize growth. Such laboratory-based studies argue that adaptations that allow growth in a low-androgen environment render prostate cancer sensitive to restoration of androgens, especially at supraphysiologic doses. Based on preclinical data as well as clinical observations, trials employing high-dose testosterone (HDT) therapy have now been conducted. These trials suggest a clinical benefit in cancer response and quality of life in a subset of castration-resistant prostate cancer patients. Laboratory studies also suggest that HDT may yet be optimized further to improve efficacy or durability of response. However, laboratory observations suggest that the cancer will inevitably adapt to HDT, and, as with prior androgen deprivation, disease progression follows. Nonetheless, the adaptations made to render tumors resistant to hormonal manipulations may reveal vulnerabilities that can be exploited to prolong survival and provide other clinical benefits.

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