Chemo first may help men with metastatic prostate cancer live longer
Date: Jun-02-2014In a clinical trial, men with newly diagnosed, metastatic, hormone-sensitive prostate
cancer who received chemotherapy straight away alongside hormone-blocking therapy lived more than
a year longer than men who followed the standard treatment - which is to wait until the tumors have
become resistant to hormone therapy before receiving chemotherapy.
The scientists running the National Cancer Institute-funded phase 3 trial are from Dana-Farber Cancer
Institute and the Eastern Co-operative Oncology Group.
They say the dramatic results are likely to
change current standard practice, which has been routine since the 1950s.
Principal trial investigator Dr. Christopher J. Sweeney, of Dana-Farber's Lank Center for
Genitourinary Oncology, presented the results at the 50th annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) on June 1, 2014 in Chicago, IL.
Approach 'warrants being new standard treatment'
"This is the first study to identify a strategy that prolongs survival in newly diagnosed,
metastatic prostate cancer," says Dr. Sweeney, who adds:
"The benefit is substantial and warrants this being
a new standard treatment for men who have high-extent disease and are fit for chemotherapy."
The increase in survival seen on the trial is significantly longer than the 2-6 months
typically seen in successful studies of other metastatic adult solid tumors, says Dr. Bruce E.
Johnson, chief clinical research officer at Dana-Farber.
After skin cancers, prostate cancer is the most commonly diagnosed cancer in men in North America.
Estimates from the National Cancer Institute forecast that in 2014, around
233,000 men in the US will discover they have prostate cancer, and 29,480 will die from causes
linked to the disease.
The current practice for men newly diagnosed with prostate cancer that has already spread to
other parts of the body, and whose tumors feed on male hormones, is to first administer drugs that
block the hormones - androgen deprivation therapy (ADT).
However, in most cases, the tumors become resistant to ADT and the cancer progresses. It is only
when this happens that the patients are started on chemotherapy.
Earlier chemo hampers cancer's ability to repair cell damage
The new trial tested the idea that giving the men chemo earlier - at the same time as starting
on ADT - would hamper the cancer cells' ability to repair damage, which in turn would delay the
onset of resistance.
The trial started in 2006 and recruited 790 men newly diagnosed with metastatic prostate
cancer in over 340 centers. The patients were randomized to receive either hormone therapy alone
or with chemotherapy (the drug used was docetaxel, brand name Taxotere) over 18 weeks.
In the hormone therapy only group, 124 patients were given chemo as well when their cancer worsened.
In the hormone therapy plus chemo group, 45 patients whose disease progressed were given extra
chemo.
Over a median follow-up of 29 months, 136 patients in the hormone therapy only group died,
while 101 died in the group that received both hormone therapy and chemo.
This is equivalent to a median overall survival of 57.6 months for the men who received chemo
earlier, compared with 44 months for the men who received it later - over a year of prolonged
survival.
The benefit was even greater where the cancer had spread to major organs or the bones. Men with
such high-extent disease who received chemo at the same time as hormone therapy had a median
overall survival of 49.2 months, compared with 32.2 in the group that received chemo later - a
difference of 17 months.
Dr. Sweeney says, "This study shows that early chemotherapy increases the chances that certain
patients with metastatic prostate cancer have a longer time without symptoms from cancer, and also
live longer."
He further explains their findings in the video below:
In March 2014, Medical News Today reported on a study published in the New England
Journal of Medicine that suggested in terms of survival, surgery is better than watchful
waiting for younger prostate cancer patients. The researchers analyzed data from a large
Scandinavian study of nearly 700 men with prostate cancer who were randomized either to treatment
surgery or watchful waiting with no initial treatment and followed for up to 24 years.
Written by Catharine Paddock PhD
View all articles written by Catharine, or follow Catharine on:
Courtesy: Medical News Today
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