| Literature DB >> 23620672 |
Ferenc G Rick1, Norman L Block, Andrew V Schally.
Abstract
Androgen deprivation therapy remains the mainstay of medical treatment for advanced prostate cancer. Commonly, this is achieved with medical androgen deprivation rather than surgical intervention as the permanence and psychological effects of the latter are unacceptable for most patients. Degarelix is a third generation antagonist of luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH, also termed gonadotropin-releasing hormone) for the first-line treatment of androgen-dependent advanced prostate cancer. Degarelix acts directly on the pituitary receptors for LHRH, blocking the action of endogenous LHRH. The use of degarelix eliminates the initial undesirable surge in gonadotropin and testosterone levels, which is produced by agonists of LHRH. Degarelix is the most comprehensively studied and widely available LHRH antagonist worldwide. Clinical trials have demonstrated that degarelix has a long-term efficacy similar to the LHRH agonist leuprolide in achieving testosterone suppression in patients with prostate cancer. Degarelix, however, produces a faster suppression of testosterone and prostate-specific antigen (PSA), with no testosterone surges or microsurges, and thus prevents the risk of clinical flare in advanced disease. Recent clinical trials demonstrated that treatment with degarelix results in improved disease control when compared with an LHRH agonist in terms of superior PSA progression-free survival, suggesting that degarelix likely delays progression to castration-resistant disease and has a more significant impact on bone serum alkaline phosphatase and follicle-stimulating hormone. Degarelix is usually well tolerated, with limited toxicity and no evidence of systemic allergic reactions in clinical studies. Degarelix thus represents an important addition to the hormonal armamentarium for therapy of advanced androgen-dependent prostate cancer.Entities:
Keywords: GnRH; LHRH; androgen-dependent prostate cancer; degarelix; hormonal therapy; metastatic prostate cancer
Year: 2013 PMID: 23620672 PMCID: PMC3633549 DOI: 10.2147/OTT.S32426
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Onco Targets Ther ISSN: 1178-6930 Impact factor: 4.147
Phase II dose-finding clinical trials of degarelix in prostate cancer
| Author (year) | Study design | Number of patients | Primary endpoints | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gittelman et al (2008) | 1-year multicenter, randomized, parallel-group, open-label trial comparing efficacy and safety of degarelix with a starting dose of 200 mg followed by maintenance doses of 60 or 80 mg per month for 1 year | 127 | The proportion of patients with serum T 0.5 ng/mL or less at all monthly measurements throughout 1 year of treatment and the proportion with T ≤ 0.5 ng/mL at all monthly measurements throughout 1 year of treatment for those with testosterone ≤ 0.5 ng/mL at the 1-month assessment | |
| 88% after one month, 93% and 98% (60 mg and 80 mg) after 1 year | ||||
| Median reduction of 96% after 1 year | ||||
| van Poppel et al (2008) | 1-year multicenter, randomized, parallel-group, open-label trial comparing efficacy and safety of degarelix with starting doses of 200 or 240 mg followed by maintenance doses of 80, 120, or 160 mg per month for 1 year | 187 | The proportion of patients with serum T ≤ 0.5 ng/mL at 1 month and at every monthly visit up to 1 year | |
| 86% (200 mg) versus 95% (240 mg) after 1 month, 92% (80 mg), 96% ( 120 mg), 100% ( 160 mg) after 1 year | ||||
| Median reduction of 97%–98% after 1 year | ||||
| Ozono et al (2012) | 1-year multicenter, randomized, parallel-group, open-label trial comparing efficacy and safety of degarelix with starting doses of 200 or 240 mg followed by maintenance doses of 80 or 160 mg per month for 1 year, respectively | 273 | The proportion of patients with a serum T level of ≤0.5 ng/mL between 28 and 364 days, which was considered a treatment response | |
| 99.3% (240/80 mg) and 98.5% (240/160 mg) after 3 days, and 94.5% (240/80 mg) and 95.2% (240/160 mg) between 28 and 364 days | ||||
| Median reduction of 79%–80% after 28 days, later values not given in article |
Abbreviations: PSA, prostate-specific antigen; T, testosterone.
Phase III trial Phase III extension trials, and additional analyses from Phase III study on degarelix in prostate cancer
| Author (year) | Study design | Number of patients | Primary endpoint/goal of study | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Klotz et al (2008) | l-year, multicenter, randomized, open-label Phase III trial comparing efficacy and safety of degarelix at 240 mg for 1 month followed by a monthly maintenance dose of 80 mg or 160 mg versus leuprolide 7.5 mg monthly | 610 | Suppression of testosterone to ≤0.5 ng/mL at all monthly measurements from day 28 to day 364, thus defining the treatment response | |
| 97.2%, 98.3%, and 96.4% of patients in the degarelix 240/80 mg, degarelix 240/160 mg and leuprolide groups, respectively after 1 year | ||||
| PSA decline from baseline was significantly faster in the degarelix groups than with leuprolide, PSA values not given in article | ||||
| Tombalet al (2010) | See Klotz et al (2008) | 610 | To compare the activity of degarelix and leuprolide regarding PSA recurrence-free survival | Patients receiving degarelix showed a significantly lower risk of PSA progression or death compared with leuprolide ( |
| Schröder et al (2010) | See Klotz et al (2008) | 610 | To compare the activity of degarelix and leuprolide in the control of total S-ALP levels | Patients with metastatic disease or those with PSA levels of ≥50 ng/mL at baseline had greater reductions in S-ALP levels with degarelix than with leuprolide. Patients in the degarelix group maintained S-ALP suppression throughout the study, in contrast to those in the leuprolide group |
| de la Rosette et al (2011) | See Klotz et al (2008) | 134 | To evaluate whether switching PCa patients from leuprolide to degarelix is associated with any change in the efficacy of T suppression or safety profile during the first 3 months | Serum T, LH, and PSA levels were all sustained in both treatment arms during the observation period. Interestingly, FSH levels were further decreased by 30% following the switch to degarelix |
| Smithet al (2011 ) | A total of nine clinical trials were pooled for this analysis | 1704 | To investigate associations of baseline CV disease risk profile, dosing regimen, and treatment duration with incident CV disease during ADT therapy with degarelix in patients with PCa | CV event rates were similar before and after degarelix treatment. Events largely occurred in patients with preexisting CV disease and further modulated by age and modifiable risk factors |
| Damberet al (2012) | See Klotz et al (2008) | 610 | To investigate the effects of baseline T on T control and PSA suppression comparing degarelix and leuprolide in prostate cancer | Higher baseline T delayed castration with both treatments. However, castrate T levels and PSA suppression occurred more rapidly with degarelix irrespective of baseline T, without the need for flare protection |
| Iversenet al (2011) | See Klotz et al (2008) | 610 | To compare the onset, incidence, and frequency/intensity of hot flashes during ADT with degarelix versus an leuprolide | Although the higher velocity of T suppression with degarelix seems to have a role in the faster onset and greater frequency/severity of hot flashes in the early phase, the overall incidence rate and hot flash score generated by degarelix and leuprolide were comparable |
| Axcrona et al (2012) | Randomized, parallel-arm, active-controlled, open-label, multicenter trial patients treated with either monthly degarelix (240/80 mg) or goserelin (3.6 mg) for 12 weeks | 182 | To assess the efficacy of monthly degarelix treatment for reduction of TPV, relief of LUTS, and improvement of QoL in patients with PCa using monthly goserelin as the active control | Changes in TPV for degarelix and goserelin were similar (–37.2% versus –39.0%); decreases in IPSS were greater in degarelix than in goserelin-treated patients; the number of patients with an IPSS change of ≥3 over baseline was also significantly higher in patients treated with degarelix |
| Smithet al (2010) | See Klotz et al (2008) | 610 | To assess the CV safety profile of degarelix | There were no significant differences between treatment groups for mean change in Fridericia’s correction of the QT interval during the trial. The incidence of arrhythmias during a 1-year period was similar for subjects treated with degarelix and leuprolide |
| Ulmert et al (2012) | See van Poppel et al (2008) | 24 | To assess elimination rates of the biomarkers PSA and hK2 after rapid induction of castration with degarelix | The median time to 50% reduction was 8–9 days for tPSA versus 2–4 days for hK2, iPSA, and fPSA. The percentage eliminated at day 3 and day 7 was significantly higher for hK2, iPSA and fPSA than for tPSA (all |
| 92% of patients after 24 hours and 100% after 72 hours |
Abbreviations: ADT, androgen deprivation therapy; CV, cardiovascular; fPSA, free PSA; FSH, follicle stimulating hormone; hK2, human kallikrein-related peptidase 2; iPSA, intact PSA; IPSS, International Prostate Symptom Score; LH, luteinizing hormone; LUTS, lower urinary tract symptoms; PCa, prostate cancer; PSA, prostate-specific antigen; QoL, quality of life; S-ALP, serum alkaline phosphatase; T, testosterone; tPSA, total/complex PSA; TPV; total prostate volume.