| Literature DB >> 29556815 |
Juan Pablo Sade1, Carlos Alberto Vargas Báez2, Martin Greco3, Carlos Humberto Martínez4, Miguel Ángel Álvarez Avitia5, Carlos Palazzo6, Narciso Hernández Toriz7, Patricia Isabel Bernal Trujillo8, Diogo Assed Bastos9, Fabio Augusto Schutz10, Santiago Bella11, Lucas Nogueira12, Neal D Shore13.
Abstract
Prostate cancer is a significant burden and cause of mortality in Latin America. This article reviews the treatment options for patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) and provides consensus recommendations to assist Latin American prostate cancer specialists with clinical decision making. A multidisciplinary expert panel from Latin America reviewed the available data and their individual experience to develop clinical consensus opinions for the use of life-prolonging agents in mCRPC, with consideration given to factors influencing patient selection and treatment monitoring. There is a lack of level 1 evidence for the best treatment sequence or combinations in mCRPC. In this context, consensus recommendations were provided for the use of taxane-based chemotherapies, androgen receptor axis-targeted agents and targeted alpha therapy, for patients in Latin America. Prostate-specific antigen (PSA) changes alone, during treatment, should be treated with caution; PSA may not be a suitable biomarker for radium-223. Bone scans and computed tomography are the standard imaging modalities in Latin America. Imaging should be prompted during treatment where symptomatic decline and/or significant worsening of laboratory evaluations are reported, or where a course of therapy has been completed and another antineoplastic agent is under consideration. Recommendations and guidance for treatment options in Latin America are provided in the context of country-level variable access to approved agents and technologies for treatment monitoring. Patients should be treated with the purpose of prolonging overall survival and preserving quality of life through increasing the opportunity to administer all available life-prolonging therapies when appropriate.Entities:
Keywords: Chemotherapy; Hormonal therapy; Latin America; Radium-223; mCRPC
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29556815 PMCID: PMC5859699 DOI: 10.1007/s12032-018-1105-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Oncol ISSN: 1357-0560 Impact factor: 3.064
Summary of treatment recommendations for approved agents in mCRPC in Latin America
| Agent | Initiation | Switch/stop | Monitoring treatment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chemotherapy | |||
| Docetaxela | Patients with rapidly progressive (symptomatic) and/or high burden of disease | Clinical indication/radiographic progression | Radiographic methodology depends on availability. Bone and CT scans are standard imaging techniques for diagnosing new bone lesions. CT scan is useful for monitoring extra-skeletal progression whilst on treatment |
| Cabazitaxel | Patients progressing (who do not respond or have a short response) on docetaxel | ||
| AR axis therapyb | |||
| Abiraterone acetate | First-line for mildly symptomatic/asymptomatic patients | Clinical indication/radiographic progression | MRI and PET with new molecular tracers may prove useful in the future for monitoring disease progression but require validation. |
| Enzalutamide | As above | ||
| Targeted alpha therapy | |||
| Radium-223c | In patients with symptomatic bone metastases | Clinical indication/radiographic progression (evidence of visceral metastases) | In the future, ALP may be validated as a more suitable marker than PSA for monitoring response to radium-223 |
ALP alkaline phosphatase, CT computed tomography, mCRPC metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer, MRI magnetic resonance imaging, PET positron emission tomography, PSA prostate-specific antigen
aDocetaxel + androgen depravation therapy is also preferred for high-volume, metastatic hormone-sensitive disease
bBicalutamide was recommended as a treatment alternative in cases where access to new hormone therapy is restricted or the aim is to expose patients to an additional line of therapy; however, results are expected to be worse than those with abiraterone or enzalutamide
cFor the purpose of prolonging survival (not pain palliation) in patients with bone-predominant disease (no visceral metastases). Symptoms should be carefully assessed. Giving earlier in the course increases likelihood of receiving all six treatment cycles of life-prolonging therapy