| Literature DB >> 31176622 |
Eleni Efstathiou1, John W Davis2, Louis Pisters2, Weimin Li3, Sijin Wen4, Ryan P McMullin5, Michael Gormley3, Deborah Ricci6, Mark Titus7, Anh Hoang7, Amado J Zurita7, NamPhuong Tran8, Weimin Peng8, Thian Kheoh9, Arturo Molina10, Patricia Troncoso11, Christopher J Logothetis7.
Abstract
Optimal therapeutic strategy remains an unmet need in localised high-risk prostate cancer (LHRPC). Androgen biosynthesis inhibition in the preoperative setting may improve outcomes. In this single-centre randomised trial, we looked at therapy outcomes of preoperative treatment with abiraterone acetate+prednisone (AAP)+luteinising hormone-releasing hormone agonist (LHRHa) or LHRHa alone followed by radical prostatectomy in 65 men. We did not see a significant difference of organ-confined carcinoma (p=0.27). However, tumour volume measures were significantly lower for AAP+LHRHa treatment (p≤0.001). Of note, lower tumour epithelium volume correlated with improved biochemical recurrence-free survival at ≥4-yr follow-up (p=0.0014). Tumours pretreated with AAP+LHRHa had lower proliferation and androgen signalling expression than LHRHa. On multivariate analysis, glucocorticoid receptor (GR) overexpression correlated with persistent tumours in AAP+LHRHa (p=0.018). The presence of nuclear androgen receptor splice variant (nARV7) correlated with persistent tumours in both arms. No new safety signals were observed. This is the first study investigating the role of preoperative AAP+LHRHa versus LHRHa alone in LHRPC. We report significant cytoreduction by tumour volume measures inversely correlating with biochemical relapse. Validation of these proposed tumour volume measures is planned. A potential role of GR in resistance to androgen biosynthesis inhibition warrants further study. PATIENTEntities:
Keywords: Abiraterone acetate; Androgen deprivation therapy; Androgen receptor; Androgen receptor splice variant; Glucocorticoid receptor; High-risk localised prostate cancer; Neoadjuvant; Preoperative; Radical prostatectomy; Tumour volume
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31176622 PMCID: PMC7205516 DOI: 10.1016/j.eururo.2019.05.010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Urol ISSN: 0302-2838 Impact factor: 20.096