4.7 Article

Antiandrogen withdrawal in castrate-refractory prostate cancer

Journal

CANCER
Volume 112, Issue 11, Pages 2393-2400

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/cncr.23473

Keywords

antiandrogen withdrawal; prostate cancer; PSA; prognosis; survival; secondary hormonal therapy; hormone-refractory prostate cancer

Categories

Funding

  1. NCI NIH HHS [CA22433, U10 CA045377, U10 CA046282, CA76447, UG1 CA233340, U10 CA058882, U10 CA046441, U10 CA032102-21, CA58658, U10 CA074647-03, U10 CA014028, N01 CA035119, U10 CA180846, N01 CA046441, U10 CA035176-16, N01 CA027057, N01 CA035178, U10 CA058882-07, U10 CA067575, N01 CA038926, U10 CA076429-02, U10 CA042777-14, U10 CA032102, CA58723, N01 CA004919, U10 CA027057-20, CA37981, CA58416, U10 CA027057, U10 CA058861, U10 CA035090, N01 CA035176, CA04920, U10 CA035090-17, CA46136, U10 CA035176, CA76429, N01 CA067575, U10 CA076447-03, CA35261, U10 CA004919, U10 CA035119-16, N01 CA035431, U10 CA004919-40, CA12213, CA12644, U10 CA012644-32, CA20319, U10 CA046441-12, U10 CA012213-28, U10 CA037981-17, CA42777, U10 CA035119, N01 CA032102, U10 CA022433-22, U10 CA035178-16, U10 CA035431, U10 CA042777, U10 CA058416-08, U10 CA020319-23, U10 CA035261-17, U10 CA014028-31, U10 CA035431-17, U10 CA058658-08, U10 CA035178, U10 CA035261, CA46282, CA76132, U10 CA058861-08, U10 CA046282-13, CA35090, U10 CA038926-14, CA58861, U10 CA046113-13, U10 CA074647, U10 CA020319, CA45377, CA58882, CA46113, CA14028, U10 CA038926, U10 CA045377-14, CA74647] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NHLBI NIH HHS [T32 HL076132, R01 HL058723, T32 HL076132-01, R01 HL058723-02] Funding Source: Medline
  3. NIAID NIH HHS [R01 AI049200, R01 AI041440, R01 AI049200-01] Funding Source: Medline
  4. NINDS NIH HHS [F30 NS046136-02] Funding Source: Medline

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BACKGROUND. Antiandrogen withdrawal is a potential therapeutic maneuver for patients with progressive prostate cancer. This study was designed to examine antiandrogen withdrawal effects within the context of a large multi-institutional prospective trial. METHODS. Eligibility criteria included progressive prostate adenocarcinoma despite combined androgen blockade. Eligible patients received prior initial treatment with an antiandrogen plus orchiectomy or luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) agonist. Patients were stratified according to type of antiandrogen, type of progression (prostate-specific antigen [PSA] or radiographic), presence or absence of metastatic disease, and prior LHRH agonist versus surgical castration. RESULTS. A total of 210 eligible and evaluable patients had a median follow-up of 5.0 years; 64% of patients previously received flutamide, 32% bicalutamide, and 3% nilutamide. Of the 210 patients, 21% of patients had confirmed PSA decreases of >= 50% (95% CI, 16% to 27%). No radiographic responses were recorded. Median progression-free survival (PFS) was 3 months (95% CI, 2 months to 4 months); however, 19% had 12-month or greater progression-free intervals. Median overall survival (OS) after antiandrogen withdrawal was 22 months (20 and 40 months for those with and without radiographic evidence of metastatic disease, respectively). Multivariate analyses indicated that longer duration of antiandrogen use, lower PSA at baseline, and PSA-only progression at study entry were associated with both longer PFS and OS. Longer antiandrogen use was the only significant predictor of PSA response. CONCLUSIONS. These data indicate a relatively modest rate of PSA response in patients who were undergoing antiandrogen withdrawal; however, PFS can be relatively prolonged (>= 1 year) in approximately 19% of patients.

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