| Literature DB >> 27340608 |
Thy Pham1, Martin C Sadowski2, Huika Li1, Derek J Richard3, Michael C d'Emden4, Kerry Richard5.
Abstract
Hormonal manipulation plays a significant role in the treatment of advanced hormone naïve prostate cancer and castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) with or without previous chemotherapy. Combination of gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH) agonists and androgen receptor (AR) antagonists (combined androgen blockade; CAB) is the first line therapy for advanced hormone naïve prostate cancer, but current strategies are developing novel GnRH antagonists to overcome disadvantages associated with GnRH agonist monotherapy and CAB in the clinical setting. Abiraterone acetate and enzalutamide are hormonal agents currently available for patients with CRPC and are both shown to improve overall survival versus placebo. Recently, in clinical trials, testosterone has been administered in cycles with existing surgical and chemical androgen deprivation therapies (ADT) (intermittent therapy) to CRPC patients of different stages (low risk, metastatic) to abate symptoms of testosterone deficiency and reduce cost of treatment from current hormonal therapies for patients with CRPC. This review will provide an overview on the therapeutic roles of hormonal manipulation in advanced hormone naïve and castration-resistant prostate cancers, as well as the development of novel hormonal therapies currently in preclinical and clinical trials.Entities:
Keywords: Androgen deprivation therapy; Androgen receptor; Castration-resistant; Hormone naïve; Prostate cancer; Testosterone
Year: 2016 PMID: 27340608 PMCID: PMC4918127 DOI: 10.1186/s40164-016-0046-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Hematol Oncol ISSN: 2162-3619
FDA-approved hormonal therapies for advanced hormone naïve prostate cancer and metastasis castration-resistant prostate cancer
| Stage of prostate cancer | Hormonal agent | Function | Year of FDA approval | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Advanced, hormone naïve | Goserelin acetate | GnRH agonist | 1989 | [ |
| Leuprolide acetate | GnRH agonist | 1989 | [ | |
| Histrelin acetate | GnRH agonist | 1991 | [ | |
| Triptorelin pamoate | GnRH agonist | 2000 | [ | |
| Abarelix | GnRH antagonist | 2003 | [ | |
| Degarelix | GnRH antagonist | 2008 | [ | |
| Bicalutamide | AR antagonist | 1995 | [ | |
| Flutamide | AR antagonist | 1989 | [ | |
| Castrate-resistant | Abiraterone acetate | CYP17 inhibitor | 2011b | [ |
| 2012a | [ | |||
| Enzalutamide | AR antagonist | 2012b | [ | |
| 2014a | [ |
GnRH gonadotropin releasing hormone, AR androgen receptor
aPatients without previous treatment with docetaxel (chemotherapy naïve)
bPatients treated and progressed from docetaxel (post-chemotherapy)
Prices of several hormonal agents for prostate cancer in Australia (as of January 2016)
| Hormonal agent/s | Form and strength | Price ($AUD) | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Full price | PBS (maximum number of repeats for PBS price) | |||
| Advanced or high-risk hormone naïve prostate cancer (clinical tumor stages T3–T4, PSA > 20 ng/mL) | ||||
| Goserelin acetate | 3.6 mg implant | $323.50 | $38.30 (5) | [ |
| 10.8 g implant | $1101.16 | $38.30 (1) | [ | |
| Triptorelin acetate | 3.75 mg injection | $413.75 | $38.30 (5) | [ |
| 22.5 mg injection | $2123.34 | $38.30 (0) | [ | |
| Goserelin acetate and Bicalutamide | 3.6 mg implant and 50 mg tablet (28 tablets), respectively | $472.81 | $38.30 (5) | [ |
| 10.8 mg implant and 50 mg tablet (28 tablets), respectively | $1240.02 | $38.30 (0) | [ | |
| Leuprorelin (or leuprolide) acetate | 30 mg injection | $1442.09 | $38.30 (1) | [ |
| Degarelix | 80 mg injection | $413.75 | $38.30 (5) | [ |
| 120 mg injection | $432.92 | $38.30 (0) | [ | |
| Bicalutamide | 50 mg tablet (28 tablets) | $98.40 | $38.30 (5) | [ |
| Flutamide | 250 mg tablets (100 tablets) | $169.70 | $38.30 (5) | [ |
| Nilutamide | 150 mg tablet (30 tablets) | $223.68 | $38.30 (5) | [ |
| Metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) (histologically confirmed prostate cancer, N1/M1, more than two [or three in other studies] consecutive rises in PSA levels over 25 % above nadir value following surgical or chemical ADT for at least 1 week) | ||||
| Abiraterone acetate | 250 mg tablet (120 tablets) | $3600.41 | $38.30 (2) | [ |
| Enzalutamide | 40 mg capsule (112 capsules) | $3700.17 | $38.30 (2) | [ |
PBS pharmaceutical benefits scheme