Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia – Prostate Cancer – Prostatitis

Posts Tagged ‘Therapy’

Post-castration Drug Therapy in Prostate Cancer Patients

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A new study concludes that men treated with the drug flutamide after surgical castration for advanced metastatic prostate cancer have poorer qualities of life, compared to patients not taking the drug.

* researchers at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, in Seattle, Washington, studied more than 700 prostate cancer who were castrated to reduce testosterone levels to collect data.

* found that those patients post-operatively treated with flutamide reported higher levels of diarrhea and mental health problems after three months, compared to patients taking a placebo.

* authors further note that, in agreement with another recently- published study, no survival benefit was found among those treated with the drug after castration, compared to those given a placebo.

New Radiation Therapy for Prostate Cancer

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Seller of cancer therapies becomes a patient with a success story

Cancer has been a part of Don Mills’ life for 17 years, but it was only in the last year that it threatened him with death.

Mills sold radiation therapy systems for Varian Medical Systems Inc. for almost two decades, traveling to cancer centers across the United States. While waiting for sales appointments, he often sat alongside cancer patients.

“I can’t tell you how many times I’d say a little prayer, ‘Please, don’t let me be sitting here for anything other than just selling something,’ ” Mills recalls.

But when he was diagnosed with the disease, he decided to take a chance on something new in his field: Intensity Modulated Radiation Therapy (IMRT), which targets tumors more accurately and intensely than conventional radiation. Doctors say others could soon benefit from this approach.

“IMRT is certainly coming into vogue. It’s the most recent thing that’s out there for radiation oncologists,” says Dr. Scott McGinnis, a radiation oncologist in Charlotte, N.C.

Mills’ story began in April 1999, when he had his annual physical. It included a prostate specific antigen (PSA) test, which his doctor had started doing seven years earlier because of a family history of prostate cancer.

This test found Mills’ PSA had shot up by a factor of almost three. He went to a urologist. Two of six biopsies showed malignant cancer.

The irony was not lost on Mills, and there was a more visceral response.

“I was very angry,” says Mills, who was 50 at the time of the diagnosis.

A devout runner since high school, the Colorado Springs, Colo., resident pounded 25 to 30 miles of pavement a week. He never smoked and watched his diet. That’s why Mills harbored a sense of betrayal – his body hadn’t held up its end of the bargain.

“I always thought that with my running and my lifestyle, I’m immune to cancer. I’ll live to a ripe old age and die in my sleep. So I was pretty angry about it. I thought, ‘Why me?’ but I figured it was God’s plan. I can’t question that. I don’t agree with it, I don’t like it, but I’ll deal with it,” Mills says.

Once over the initial shock and outrage, Mills plunged into researching his options. He says it wasn’t a given he’d choose radiation treatment just because he sells radiation therapy systems.

“Believe it or not, even though I work for a company that sells this equipment and was very familiar with that, it was not a slam dunk that that’s what I was going to do,” he says.

Mills was overwhelmed by what he discovered.

“I found out I really wasn’t as knowledgeable as I thought I was about this disease. When I started researching it and looking into it, the thing that really bothered me was the amount of options available,” Mills says.

They included surgery, different kinds of radiation treatments and watchful waiting.

“After about two weeks of looking at these things, I became extremely frustrated that there was no clear winner, as such. Some had terrible side effects or long-term rehabilitation, and some had some very negative quality-of-life issues associated with them,” Mills says.

After more research and consultations with medical friends and colleagues, Mills chose Intensity Modulated Radiation Therapy (IMRT). It uses computer-generated images to match a radiation dose to the shape of the tumor, while avoiding more of the healthy tissue.

Because of its precision, IMRT allows for higher doses of radiation, quicker treatment and fewer complications.

“I want to point out that it’s important for each individual to come to their own conclusion. What worked for me, what I felt was best for me, may not be best for other individuals,” Mills says.

He started his nine-week treatment at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York City in last September. Each day he’d go for his treatments, which lasted about 10 minutes each.

Mills kept running and doing some work during his cancer therapy. He’d run six miles a day at dawn through Central Park and go to therapy later. Not having to hang up his running shoes was a boost to his mental and physical well-being, he says.

He says he feels Intensity Modulated Radiation Therapy (IMRT) will change the face of radiation oncology.

“If you can lower the healthy tissue dose and raise the dose to the tumor, you’re going to cure a lot more people. You’re also going to lower the complication rate. People feel better and they can continue their lives as near-normal as they can,” Mills says.

“All the different companies are now promoting these computer-operated systems for different radiation therapy centers to use,” McGinnis says. “So people are starting to incorporate them into their daily practices. It’s still very new.”

“It has to get in and be used, and people have to feel comfortable with the results they get before it becomes mainstream. So I think it’s probably several years down the road before it will be mainstream,” McGinnis says.

The role of ketoconazole in advanced prostate cancer

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Ketoconazole – Nizoral, Extina, Xolegel, Kuric

Prostate cancer is the most common malignancy in American males above age 55. The cause of prostate cancer is not known. The most accepted risk factors are age, race and family history. Common signs and symptoms include dysuria, urethral obstruction, back or hip pain, and complications of advanced metastatic disease such as spinal cord compression and disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) syndrome.

The American Urological System of staging prostate cancer designates four stages of tumor growth, A through D, with each stage containing substages. Stage A is occult, nonpalpable; stage B is palpable, macroscopic tumor; stage C is tumor with extracapsular extension, but still clinically localized; and stage D is metastatic disease. The management of prostate cancer is greatly influenced by the stage of the disease but also by the patient’s age, physical condition, and response to prior therapy. Traditionally, prostatectomy or radiation therapy is considered for patients with stage A or B disease and hormonal therapies that suppress the body’s production of androgens have been a standard treatment for selected patients with stage C or stage D disease. In the past decade, however, studies have been suggested that earlier initiation of hormonal therapy for patients with early forms of metastatic disease may prolong disease-free survival and overall survival.

Androgens play an important role in promoting the growth of the prostate glands and about 80% of stage D prostatic tumors are androgen dependent. The hypothalamus secretes luteinizing-hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) which in turn signals the pituitary gland to release luteinizing hormone (LH). Luteinizing hormone causes the testes to synthesize androgens, such as testosterone. After it is secreted by the testes, testosterone is metabolized into dihydrotestosterone (DHT) which then binds to its receptor to stimulate testicular protein production, cell division and growth. About 95% of testosterone is synthesized by the testes and the remaining 5% is released by the adrenal glands. The goal of hormonal therapy is to stabilize the disease or to provide regression, and this can be achieved by reducing testosterone to castrate level (<50 ng/mL). The most common hormonal therapies include bilateral orchiectomies, estrogen (e.g., diethylstilbestrol), LHRH agonists (e.g., leuprolide, buserelin, goserelin), progestins (e.g., megestrol acetate) and antiandrogens (e.g., flutamide, cyproterone, bicalutamide). The onset of action of these agents may take up to two weeks. It has recently been shown that ketoconazole can lower testosterone concentration to castrate levels within 48 hours. This prompt therapeutic onset of action has led to the investigation of ketoconazole as an antiandrogen agent.

Ketoconazole can lower testosterone concentration to castrate levels within 48 hours. Many studies show the agent inhibits two CYP450-dependent enzymes to block testosterone synthesis.

Ketoconazole is an imidazole antifungal agent. The antiandrogenic effects of this drug in mammalian cells were detected after the development of gynecomastia in some patients treated for fungal infections. Thereafter, many studies showed ketoconazole blocks the synthesis of testosterone by interfering with the cytochrome P-450-dependent enzymes of steroid biosynthesis. In the testes and the adrenal glands, cholesterol is converted to pregnenolone and progesterone. Both pregnenolone and progesterone are then transformed by a series of enzyme-controlled steps to dehydroepiandrosterone, androstenedione, and testosterone. Two cytochrome P-450-dependent enzymes, the 17-hydroxylase and the C17-20 lyase, catalyze this conversion. Ketoconazole inhibits both enzymes resulting in reduction of testosterone levels to reach castration levels in men.

First-Line Therapy

Trachtenber et al. examined the effects of oral ketoconazole 400 mg every 8 hours on 15 patients with advanced prostatic cancer.Two patients withdrew: one for personal reasons and one developed a paraspinal mass. Thirteen patients completed the study.After three days of therapy, the need for analgesics was greatly reduced in all patients. The mean serum testosterone concentrations decreased to near anorchid concentration. After six months of therapy, 13 patients were in remission and side effects of the drug were minimal. This study showed that ketoconazole was effective and well-tolerated.

In a study conducted by Aabo et al., the effect of ketoconazole was examined in 11 previously untreated prostatic cancer patients. High-dose ketoconazole 400 mg every 8 hours was reported effective in inducing complete response (elimination of pain and tumor cells) in two patients and partial response (reduction of pain, recalcification of osteolytic bone lesions) in four patients. The most common adverse reactions were nausea, anorexia and hypertension. A rebound increase in testosterone levels developed in five patients. The investigators concluded that adverse reactions and rebound increase in testosterone levels limit the use of high-dose ketoconazole as first-line therapy in advanced prostate cancer.

Cersosimo et al. reviewed a number of small studies in which ketoconazole 400 mg was given every 8 hours to a total of 88 patients. Complete and partial remissions were achieved in three and 15 patients, respectively. Adverse reactions included nausea and vomiting (33%), impotence, gynecomastia (10-15%), dry skin, elevation of hepatic aminotransferases and occasionally severe hepatitis.

Second-Line Therapy

Almost all patients will eventually no longer respond to conventional androgen deprivation therapy (orchiectomy, estrogens, LHRH agonists, etc.) and relapse. This syndrome has been termed the “antiandrogen withdrawal syndrome.” Recent reports have suggested that, in these situations, the administration of ketoconzole may be of some benefit. The rationale behind this therapy is based on the hypothesis that, after testicular castration, adrenal androgens play a significant role in prostatic tumor cell stimulation. Ketoconazole inhibits both testicular and adrenal androgenesis. Therefore, it can provide further androgen ablation.

Witjes et al. examined the efficacy of oral ketoconazole 400 mg every 8 hours or 600 mg every 12 hours daily in 28 patients. All patients had relapsing metastatic prostatic disease that was initially responsive to hormonal therapy. At the end of nine months of treatment, 13 patients died from metastatic disease. Nine patients withdrew: seven because of gastrointestinal (GI) side effects and two due to progressive disease. One patient was unevaluable. Five patients remained in the study: four were objectively stable and one had progressive disease. The clinical and biochemical results in both treatment regimens (400 mg every 8 hrs., 600 mg every 12 hrs.) were similar. Serum ketoconazole concentrations were within therapeutic levels (at least 4 µg/mL to achieve testosterone concentration within the castrate range) at 8 hrs. (400 mg every 8hrs. group) and 12 hours (600 mg every 12 hrs. group) after last ketoconazole intake. All five patients completed the study and were reported to be pain-free (required no analgesics). This study suggested that ketoconazole may be beneficial in the management of patients with relapsing metastatic prostate cancer. However, side effects of the drug may limit its use. Further studies are needed.

Small et al. studied the activities of ketoconazole in 50 patients who were refractory to flutamide and had progressive disease after flutamide withdrawal.Results of the study showed 30 patients had greater than 50% decrease in prostate specific antigen (PSA). The most common toxicities were GI upset, fatigue, edema, hepatotoxicity and rash. It was concluded that ketoconazole retained significant activity in patients who were refractory to antiandrogen therapy.

Emergency Management of disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) Syndrome

About 24% patients with prostatic cancer develop life-threatening disseminated intravascular coagulation syndrome, which requires emergency correction of the underlying disease. The triggering mechanism of this syndrome is due to the release of tissue factor by tumors into the circulation and activation of the coagulation cascade. This hypercoagulable state results in hemorrhage, thrombotic and embolic complications. Lowe and Somers reported the successful use of ketoconazole 400 mg every 8 hours in a 72-year-old black man with prostate cancer. Spontaneous bleeding from DIC stopped within 48 hours. Litt et al. also reported a similar case in an 84-year-old prostatic cancer patient. Ketoconazole 400 mg every 8 hours successfully reversed DIC syndrome in this patient after four days treatment and an orchiectomy was subsequently performed.

Conclusion

Ketoconazole inhibits the synthesis of androgens in both the testes and the adrenal glands by interfering with cytochrome P-450 enzymes. An effective dose appears to be 400 mg every 8 hours. At this level, the drug produces castrate levels of testosterone within 48 hours, produces subjective (e.g., significant pain relief) and objective (e.g., decrease in PSA levels and recalcification of osteolytic bone lesions) improvement in patients who have advanced prostate cancer. However, high incidence of adverse effects, such as severe GI intolerance, hepatic toxicity, impotence and gynecomastia may limit its routine use in this disease. Other disadvantages of ketoconazole include its short half-life that requires every-8-hour administration. Addisonian crises can occur in high-dose ketoconazole therapy and supplementation of dexamethasone may be necessary. Finally, rebound elevation of serum testosterone will occur after long-term (3–6 months) therapy.

Because of all these problems, ketoconazole is currently considered for a limited number of indications. Its major usefulness is in the group of patients who need a prompt therapeutic response, such as in disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) syndrome with advanced prostate cancer. It is an excellent modality for short-term use when orchiectomy, surgical or medical, or other forms of therapy, such as estrogens, are contraindicated. Finally, it can be used as initial empiric therapy to obtain prompt clinical relief during the diagnostic workup when prostate cancer is suspected. The role of ketoconazole in the treatment of patients with hormonal refractory disease has yet to be determined.

Herbal Help for Prostate Problems

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Saw palmetto berry extract helps to shrink swollen tissue, herbalists say

When a 50-plus man starts to have trouble when he urinates, most doctors will have a check for an enlarged prostate, properly called benign prostate hyperplasia.

And saw palmetto berry extract, listed by Consumer Reports in the US as a potentially helpful herb, could be just what the doctor ordered.

As many as a third of all men over 50 may suffer from benign prostate hyperplasia, experts estimate. The condition is not cancerous and simply means that the tissue of the prostate is inflamed and swollen.

Saw palmetto berry extract can help the tissue to shrink, allowing for more regular urination patterns – and with few side effects, as long as you use it with a doctor’s help, experts say.

How does it work? No one is exactly sure, but herbalists have an idea.

“It seems to affect the hormone levels in the genital area,” says Kara Dinda, director of education for the American Botanical Council in Austin, Texas.

And while the effects of the herb on men’s prostates seem fairly well documented, its effect on women is not known. Since hormones may be affected, it’s especially important that pregnant and lactating women not use the herb.

Use of this herb, which derives from the berries of the dwarf palmetto tree which is grown largely in Florida, dates back to the 1700s among Native Americans. Rigorous studies supporting use of the herb are far more recent.

According to an article in the Minneapolis Star Tribune, for example, a 1996 study of 1,098 men in the US showed that saw palmetto berry extract is at least as effective as a popular prescription drug – and produces fewer side effects, including impotence. And The Daily Telegraph reports that close to 90 per cent of men in Germany with benign prostate hyperplasia are treated with plant extracts, and saw palmetto berry extract tops the list.

One concern among doctors has been that use of the herb or a product containing it might affect PSA levels, by which prostate cancer can be diagnosed. But an editorial in Urology said that US herb specialist Varro Tyler and a UCLA urologist showed that use of the herb did not affect any tests of the prostate, including the PSA.

Side effects? They’re relatively minor: stomach problems, headaches and, with large doses, diarrhea.

One caveat: A Boston Globe story reported that a 1998 review of the herb suggested that other new prostate medications may in fact be more effective than saw palmetto berry extract.

What To Do

This herb sounds promising. Men should ask their GP for further information, however. “Herbs produce chemicals,” says Erica Kipp, manager of the Plant Research Laboratory for the New York Botanical Garden. “I think people have the misconception that anything from a plant is natural and good and benign – and this is not necessarily the case.”

Prostate Cancer: Options in Moderate- and Late-Stage Cancer

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External beam radiation therapy (EBRT) and interstitial implantation (brachytherapy) are the two types of radiation therapy (RT) currently available for treatment of prostate cancer. The course for external beam radiation therapy is four to six weeks and is administered daily. A linear accelerator is used to direct gamma rays to the prostate with efforts made to avoid radiating healthy tissue. Problems associated with EBRT are impotence, diarrhea, bowel urgency, hemorrhoids, urinary urgency, urinary frequency, and pain. According to the Prostate Cancer Outcomes Study, men who underwent radical prostatectomy (RP) were more likely to be incontinent and impotent than men who underwent EBRT; however, men who received external beam radiation therapy had an increased incidence of bowel dysfunction. Brachytherapy involves implanting radioactive seeds into the prostate which will emit radiation over a given period of time. Brachytherapy is convenient because it requires one outpatient visit for implantation compared to external beam radiation therapy, which is administered daily. The procedure can cause prostate inflammation, which may lead to severe urinary retention. Long-term effects from brachytherapy include painful urination, urinary retention, bowel dysfunction, and rectal ulcers.

Hormone Therapy: Hormone therapy has a variety of roles in the treatment of prostate cancer. Diethylstilbestrol (DES) was one of the first hormonal treatments for prostate cancer. DES inhibits gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) from the hypothalamus, thus inhibiting testosterone release from the testes. Diethylstilbestrol had a number of undesirable toxicities associated with it, such as increased risk of cardiovascular death, thromboembolism, and significant gynecomastia. Diethylstilbestrol is no longer first-line hormone therapy since luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LH-RH) agonists have been introduced and have a better side effect profile. DES, which is no longer manufactured commercially, may be used as a second-line agent and may be obtained from a specialty compounding pharmacy. The LH-RH agonists available are goserelin, leuprolide, and triptorelin; all are as effective as a bilateral orchiectomy in reducing testosterone levels. Luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone agonists inhibit the release of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH) through negative feedback by down-regulating the receptors on the pituitary. Testosterone levels are then decreased because there is a lack of LH to stimulate the testes to produce testosterone. Initially LH-RH agonists cause FSH and LH to surge with a concomitant surge in testosterone levels until receptor down-regulation occurs. This increase in testosterone can cause a “flare” of the disease, leading to an increased growth in the tumor, urinary symptoms, and bone pain, which usually lasts about two weeks. Other common adverse effects from luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone agonists include erectile dysfunction, hot flashes, and decreased libido. Giving the patient a short course of nonsteroidal antiandrogen therapy, which will block the androgen receptor at the cellular level, inhibiting the effects of testosterone, can prevent or minimize this effect. Antiandrogens (bicalutamide, flutamide, and nilutamide) competitively inhibit testosterone and dihydrotestosterone from binding to the androgen receptor. Adverse effects from antiandrogens are gynecomastia, hot flashes, diarrhea, constipation, and elevated liver function tests. Because antiandrogens do not provide as much androgen deprivation when compared to orchiectomy, it is not recommended that they be used as monotherapy in advanced or high-risk prostate cancer. For patients with low- and intermediate-risk early prostate cancer, there is a developing trend to treat with antiandrogens as monotherapy, especially in younger males who may want to decrease the incidence of impotence. In one study, the response rate of monotherapy with high-dose bicalutamide (>= 150 mg) in 31 patients with hormone-refractory disease was 22.5% overall and 43% in patients who were previously treated with flutamide. Combination therapy with luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone agonists and antiandrogens, otherwise known as combined androgen blockade (CAB), is mainly reserved for patients who have advanced disease and need to prevent the effects of the testosterone surge secondary to the LH-RH agonist by being on an antiandrogen for a period of two to four weeks. Because of the inconsistent data regarding the ability of CAB to significantly increase disease-free survival, overall survival, and quality of life, CAB is not recommended as standard therapy and should not be used as long-term maintenance therapy. Neoadjuvant hormone therapy is hormone therapy given before RP or RT to reduce the tumor size. The Lupron Depot Neoadjuvant Prostate Cancer Study Group has studied the use of hormone therapy prior to prostatectomy. Patients were to receive either leuprolide plus flutamide (ie, CAB) three months before RP or RP alone. There were significantly fewer positive tumor margins in patients who received hormone therapy, but biochemical recurrence (abnormal prostate-specific antigen value) rate was the same at five years as in those who received RP alone. There have been several other prospective trials that have failed to show improvement in survival or biochemical recurrence despite improved surgical outcomes. In patients with locally advanced prostate cancer, hormone therapy plus RT has been shown to improve survival, disease-free survival, and disease progression, but it did not have the same outcomes for men with prostate-confined disease.

Chemotherapy: Eventually almost all patients will develop hormone-resistant prostate cancer (HRPC); median survival in these patients is less than one year. The use of chemotherapy in HRPC historically has been limited to palliative care. The combination of mitoxantrone plus prednisone has been shown to improve pain in hormone-resistant prostate cancer and is a suitable choice for palliative treatment. Tannock et al randomized patients to either prednisone 10 mg daily plus mitoxantrone 12 mg/m every 21 days or to prednisone 10 mg daily. Pain was improved significantly, and the response duration was longer in the mitoxantrone group (29% vs 12% and 43 vs 18 weeks, respectively). The combination of estramustine and a taxane has shown the most promise with higher rates of biochemical and objective response in addition to a palliative response. Phase I studies with estramustine and a taxane failed to show any effect on survival. However, some phase II trials with estramustine and docetaxel revealed an increase in median survival time, implying there may be a positive effect on survival with this regimen. There is currently an ongoing study comparing estramustine and docetaxel with mitoxantrone and prednisone with the primary end point being survival. There are also studies comparing three-drug regimens of chemotherapy (eg, estramustine, carboplatin, and paclitaxel), which are considered experimental at this time.

Prostate Cancer: Options in Therapy for Early-Stage Cancer

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The current treatments for organ-confined prostate cancer are watchful waiting, radical prostatectomy (RP), and radiation therapy (RT).

Watchful Waiting: When patients opt to go without treatment and wait until there is observed disease progression, this is termed watchful waiting. For the first year, patients who choose watchful waiting will have a prostate-specific antigen (PSA) test and a DRE every three months, then less frequently if there is no evidence of disease progression.

Radical Prostatectomy and Radiation Therapy: There is a need for randomized controlled trials to determine which of the standard treatments are most appropriate in early prostate cancer, since there has not been convincing data as to whether radical prostatectomy or radiation therapy is the better treatment in the early stage. Currently, the patient’s Gleason score and life expectancy determine the method of treatment. For example, a man with a low Gleason score who is expected to live for more than 20 years should be considered for a radical prostatectomy or radiation therapy, whereas a man with a high Gleason score who is not expected to live 10 years should be considered for no treatment until he is symptomatic or for radiation therapy immediately, depending on the aggressiveness and stage of the disease. For long-term survival, radical prostatectomy is thought to provide the best outcomes. Common complications from radical prostatectomy include urinary incontinence and erectile dysfunction.