| Literature DB >> 25859413 |
Mohan Hingorani1, Sanjay Dixit1, Pattu Pugazhenthi1, Simon Hawkyard1, Andrew Robertson1, Richard Khafagy1.
Abstract
Palliative radiotherapy (pRT) is primarily employed for palliation of bone pain in patients with castrate-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC). However, evidence that pRT influences prostate-specific antigen response in patients with CRPC on systemic therapy is lacking. We describe three cases of CRPC progressing after treatment with docetaxel (n=2) and abiraterone (n=1), who responded unusually after pRT for bone pain with the development of a significant biochemical response and restoration of response to systemic therapy. The possibility of pRT influencing metastatic disease in CRPC has not been previously reported, and raises the possibility of radiation-induced modulation of anti-tumor immune response mechanisms that may play a role in the restoration of response to systemic treatment.Entities:
Keywords: Prostate cancer; chemotherapy; palliative; radiotherapy
Year: 2015 PMID: 25859413 PMCID: PMC4383847 DOI: 10.7497/j.issn.2095-3941.2014.0025
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Biol Med ISSN: 2095-3941 Impact factor: 4.248
Patient and disease-related characteristics combined with initial management and subsequent lines of therapy
| Item | Case 1 | Case 2 | Case 3 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Diagnosis and management (first-line therapy) | • 64 years | • 72 years | • 78 years |
| • August 2010 | • March 2008 | • November 2010 | |
| • PSA =450 ng/mL | • PSA =1,170 ng/mL | • PSA =1,400 ng/mL | |
| • Skeletal metastasis | • Skeletal metastasis | • Skeletal metastasis | |
| • Bicalutamide monotherapy | • LHRH analogue therapy | • LHRH analogue + bicalutamide (MAB) | |
| • Zoledronic acid infusions | • PSA nadir 4.3 in September 2009 | • PSA nadir 36.5 in November 2011 | |
| • PSA nadir in November 2010 | |||
| • Palliative radiotherapy (spine) | |||
| Second-line therapy | • November 2011 | • March 2010 | • May 2012 |
| • PSA =23 ng/mL | • PSA =16.3 ng/mL | • PSA =1,400 ng/mL | |
| • LHRH analogue therapy | • LHRH analogue + bicalutamide (MAB) | • LHRH analogue + DES | |
| Third-line therapy | • September 2012 | • September 2010 | • October 2013 |
| • PSA =77 ng/mL | • PSA =46.5 ng/mL | • PSA =868 ng/mL | |
| • LHRH analogue + bicalutamide (MAB) | • LHRH analogue + DES | • Pelvic nodes + skeletal metastasis | |
| • Zoledronic acid infusion | • Zoledronic acid infusion | • LHRH analogue + docetaxel | |
| • Prednisolone | |||
| • Zoledronic acid infusion | |||
| Fourth-line therapy | • May 2013 | • April 2012 | |
| • PSA =81 ng/mL | • PSA =273 ng/mL | ||
| • No visceral metastasis | • No visceral metastasis | ||
| • LHRH analogue + docetaxel | • LHRH analogue + docetaxel | ||
| • Prednisolone | • Prednisolone | ||
| • Zoledronic acid infusion | • Zoledronic acid infusion | ||
| Fifth-line therapy | • June 2013 | ||
| • PSA =628 ng/mL | |||
| • No visceral metastasis | |||
| • LHRH analogue + abiraterone | |||
| • Prednisolone | |||
| • Zoledronic acid infusion |
PSA, prostate specific antigen; LHRH, luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone; MAB, maximal androgen blockade; DES, diethylstilboestrol.
Figure 1PSA kinetics before and after fractionated pRT that was delivered during systemic treatment with docetaxel chemotherapy (A and B) and abiraterone (C). PSA, prostate specific antigen; pRT, palliative radiotherapy.
Figure 2Bone scan appearances (case 1) during the treatment course demonstrate response to systemic chemotherapy after pRT for metastatic bone disease. (A) Bone scan prior to starting chemotherapy (PSA =106 ng/mL); (B) Bone scan after four cycles of chemotherapy showed no change, but patient developed increasing bone pain with rapid biochemical progression (PSA =220 ng/mL); (C) Bone scan performed after pRT, and further six cycles of chemotherapy showed a significant reduction in uptake (PSA =30 ng/mL). pRT, palliative radiotherapy; PSA, prostate specific antigen.