| Literature DB >> 29743949 |
Andrew Condappa1, Maxine Gossell-Williams1, William Aiken2.
Abstract
Conjugated oestrogen is one of the more affordable secondary hormonal options available for castrate-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) in Jamaica. The present study was conducted to examine the disease response in Jamaican men with CRPC treated with conjugated oestrogen. This study retrospectively reviewed the medical notes of patients who attended the urologic clinic of the University Hospital of the West Indies from 1 January 2009 to 31 December 2013 and a private urology clinic from 2 November 2005 to 3 June 2015 to identify patients diagnosed with CRPC treated with conjugated oestrogen (Premarin ®) as secondary therapy. The primary endpoint of favourable response, using the Prostate Cancer Clinical Trials Working Group 2 criteria is a decline of ≥50% in serum prostate-specific antigen (PSA) concentrations from baseline after treatment. The proportion of patients responding by the first 3-month follow-up visit and the maximal PSA declined over the 24 months of follow-up which were recorded. Thirty-two patients diagnosed with CRPC and treated with conjugated oestrogen were identified. All patients were prescribed 5.0 mg (2.5 mg tablets, twice daily) orally, as well as low dose aspirin. Favourable response was observed in 14 (43.8%) patients; however, eight other patients showed a decline in serum PSA concentration of <50%. There were no reported adverse effects. Conjugated oestrogen produced a PSA decline in Jamaican CRPC patients of this study and may therefore be a useful option for secondary therapy of CRPC. Further assessment is needed.Entities:
Keywords: androgen; castrate-resistant prostate cancer; conjugated oestrogen; premarin
Year: 2018 PMID: 29743949 PMCID: PMC5931810 DOI: 10.3332/ecancer.2018.829
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ecancermedicalscience ISSN: 1754-6605
Baseline characteristics at initiation of conjugated oestrogen in CRPC patients.
| Patient characteristics | Conjugated oestrogen |
|---|---|
| 80(12) | |
| 45(129.55) | |
| 0.32(0.46) | |
| 1(3.1%) | |
| 7(21.9%) | |
| 15(46.9%) | |
| 9(28.1%) | |
| 8(25%) | |
| 1(3.1%) | |
| 23(71.9 %) | |
| 8 (25%) | |
| 3 (9.4%) | |
| 5 (15.6%) | |
| 7 (21.9%) | |
| 1 (3.1%) | |
| 8 (25%) |
Median baseline testosterone levels for 8/32 patients; testosterone levels for 24/32 patients were not available during review
Figure 1.Waterfall chart showing first follow-up PSA response in patients treated with conjugated oestrogen. The horizontal line at −50% represents marker of favourable response. At first 3-month visit, eight subjects showed ≥50% PSA decline.
Figure 2.Waterfall chart showing maximum PSA response in patients treated with conjugated oestrogen. The horizontal line at −50% represents marker of favourable response. Favourable response (≥ 50% PSA decline) was seen in 14 subjects, while eight others showed led than 50% PSA decline.