| Literature DB >> 18728847 |
Zinelabidine Abouelfadel1, E David Crawford.
Abstract
Hormone therapy is well established for treating patients with prostate cancer and remains the mainstay of the treatment of metastatic and locally advanced disease, this article reviews the rationale for its use, its different forms, and complications and controversies still surrounding some of its modalities. Availability of long-acting synthetic luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) agonists revolutionized the hormonal treatment of prostate cancer, and helped to avoid the emotional and psychological effects related to surgical castration. The depot formula has gained wide acceptance from both patients and physicians. This review emphasizes the newer, long-acting formula, leuprorelin (leuprolide acetate), especially the 6-month formula, its advantage over over shorter-acting depot products, and its potential to become a standard of care for patients eligible for androgen deprivation therapy.Entities:
Keywords: androgen deprivation therapy (adt); leuprorelin; prostate cancer
Year: 2008 PMID: 18728847 PMCID: PMC2504071 DOI: 10.2147/tcrm.s6863
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ther Clin Risk Manag ISSN: 1176-6336 Impact factor: 2.423
Methods to interrupt the production of and/or block the action of testosterone
| Methods | Action | Side effects |
|---|---|---|
| Orchiectomy | Surgical suppression of testicular male hormones leading to immediate drop in testosterone ( | Limitations include its irreversible nature causing erectile dysfunction, occasional post-operative complications, and associated psychological factors ( |
| Estrogens | The negative feedback on the hypothalamus afforded by estrogen. Suppression of LHRH release and subsequent decrease not only of LH but also of FSH ( | Cardiovascular complications. gynecomastia is a common complaint |
| LHRH agonists | Over-stimulation of the LHRH receptors, followed by subsequent drop due to the loss the pulsatile secretion pattern ( | Testosterone surge and potential for clinical flare |
| LHRH antagonists | Inhibition of LHRH and subsequent rapid time to testosterone suppression with a higher rate of medical castration ( | -Safety of abarelix is comparable to that of LHRH agonists with or without anti-androgen |
| Anti-androgens | Block the binding of DHT to the androgen receptors in the prostate ( | Gynecomastia, breast pain Diarrhea,visual disturbances |
| Inhibitors of alfa-reductase | Inhibit 5-alfa reductase conversion of testosterone to DHT in the prostate | Gynecomastia, breast pain, anemia |
| Ketoconazole | In high dose is able to produce castrate levels of androgens (both testicular and adrenal) within 4–8 h of the first dose ( | Gastrointestinal disturbances and suppression of cortisol production which resulted in subsequent Addisonian crisis and sudden death ( |
Abbreviations: DHT, dihydrotesterone; LH, luteinizing hormone; LHRH, luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone; FSH, follicle-stimulating hormone.
Leuprorelin formulas and testosterone suppression
| Leuprorelin formula | Injection volume (mL) | Testosterone castrate level | Authors | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 50 ng/dL | 20 ng/dL | |||
| 7.5 mg monthly | 0.250 | 100.0% | 97.5% | |
| 22.5 (3 month) | 0.375 | 98% | ||
| 98% | 84% | |||
| 30 mg (4 month) | 0.500 | 96% | ||
| 45.0 mg (6 month) | 0.375 | 99% | 88% | |
Controversies around hormonal therapy for prostate cancer
| HT modality | Argument for | Argument against |
|---|---|---|
| Early vs delayed HT | The appropriate time to initiate hormonal therapy for prostate cancer remains a matter of debate. | Arguments for early hormonal therapy are countered, however, by a number of factors, including: The long natural history for most men of rising PSA levels before clinical metastases and death No randomized controlled clinical trials to confirm the survival advantage or to document the long-term effects of such therapy. Cost of hormone treatment, particularly if over a long period of time. |
| CAB | From 1980 to 1991, approximately 36 prospective, randomized studies were performed, 27 of them being reasonably well designed with at least 1 year of therapy. Of these, only 3 showed a statistically significant improvement in overall survival ( | The lack of benefit in any of the other 24 studies led to much debate about the overall benefit of MAB in men with metastatic disease. |
| This option became feasible only when medical castration became available. Advantages include reduction of side effects from therapy such as the physiological changes associated with castration, reduction of cost, and potentially delayed emergence of hormone refractoriness as evidenced by laboratory data ( | Controversy remains as to which patients might benefit the most from intermittent hormonal therapy, when to start hormonal therapy, how long to treat before stopping, and when to restart subsequent cycles. | |
| Intermittent hormone therapy | The most recent evidence is the mature experience of phase II trial from Ottawa group. Intermittent AS therapy was initiated in prostate-cancer patients to delay hormone resistance and minimize potential side effects of androgen-deprivation therapy ( | |
| Anti-androgen alone | Monotherapy with bicalutamide 150 mg once daily provides a survival outcome that is not significantly different to that of castration in men with locally advanced, non-metastatic disease, while conferring significant advantages for sexual interest and physical capacity ( | The most common side effects of non-steroidal anti-androgen monotherapy are gynecomastia and male breast pain. These events occur more frequently than with castration alone ( |
| The administration of low-dose flutamide (125 mg) was clinically effective in treating PSA recurrence after definitive treatments for prostate cancer, and was well tolerated ( | ||
| Anti-androgen and Inhibition of 5-alfa reductase | The combination of finasteride and flutamide showed a moderate efficacy in patients with PSA-only recurrence after definitive therapy. The efficacy appears to be greater in patients who can achieve a PSA nadir of 0.1 ng/mL or less after the start of treatment ( | Although the side effects are low, combined finaste-ride and flutamide therapy significantly lowers hemoglobin and haematocrit levels in men with advanced prostate cancer ( |
| Secondary HT | The strategy can be summarized as follow either the adjunction second-line non-steroidal anti-androgens or its withdrawal in case of initial CAB, the use of inhibitors of adrenal androgen production such as ketoconazole ( | Longevity following progression has historically been short, with a reported median of 6–9 months, given the lack of efficacious treatment options ( |
| PSA-only Recurence after Radical Prostatectomy | Moul et al in a large retrospective multi-center study, found that delayed hormonal therapy in high-risk disease (GS > 7 and PSA DT < 12 months) was associated with an approximately 2-fold increased risk of metastasis (
| Retrospective study, revealed that patients with PSA recurrence who did not undergo hormonal deprivation therapy had a median actuarial time to metastasis of 8 years after PSA rise, only 34% had apparent metastases ( |
| Androgen deprivation as monotheraphy for localized prostate cancer | Primary ADT has long been the treatment of choice for localized and locally advanced prostate cancer in Japan and more evidence of its efficacy is accumulating. This trend is also on the rise in clinical practice in the USA ( | ADT resulted in poor control of localized prostate cancer. In particular, younger patients and those with Gleason ≥ 6 cancers were at higher risk of treatment failure. |
| Adjuvant HT | NAS can reduce the number of tumor clonogens prior to radiation, thus increasing the tumor control probability. Also, NAS may sensitize tumor cells to radiation if cell kill by both modalities follows a common pathway. The timing and sequence of NAS and radiation are important, with radiation being most effective if given at the point of maximal tumor regression ( | The 5-year bRFS rate for patients with unfavorable tumors who received radiation doses of 72 Gy or greater vs less than 72 Gy was 75% and 41 %, respectively; thus the benefit might not be due to adding hormone to higher radiation dose ( |
Abbreviations: ADT, androgen deprivation therapy; AIPC, androgen-independent prostate cancer; AS, androgen suppression; DHT, dihydrotesterone; CAB, complete androgen blockade; HT, hormone therapy; LH, luteinizing hormone; LHRH, luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone; FSH, follicle-stimulating hormone; MAB, maximum androgen blockade; NAS, neoadjuvant androgen suppression; NHT, neoadjuvant hormonal therapy; PSA, prostate-specific antigen; TTTF,. time-to-treatment failure; TTP, time-to-disease progression.
Leuprorelin: comparative studies to other androgen suppression modalities
| Testosterone lowering/blocking method | Comment | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Leuprorelin | Orchietomy | Equivalent, orchiectomy, cost effective but associated with psychological complications | ( |
| Estrogens (DES 3 mg) vs 1 mg/day leuprorelin | Equivalent, less cardiovascular side effects with leuprorelin. | ( | |
| Other LHRH agonists | No meaningful difference among the various approved GnRH agonists. | ( | |
| LHRH antagonists (aberalix) | Short time to testosterone suppression. | ( | |
| No testosterone surge with aberalix. | |||
| Safety is comparable to that of | |||
| LHRH agonists with or without anti-androgens. |
Abbreviation: LHRH, luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone.