The addition of chemotherapy to hormonal therapy for treatment of patients with metastatic carcinoma of the prostate
β Scribed by R. P. Gibbons; S. Beckley; M. F. Brady; T. M. Chu; J. B. Dekernion; C. Dhabuwala; J. F. Gaeta; S. A. Loening; C. F. McKiel; D. G. McLeod; J. E. Pontes; G. R. Prout; P. T. Scardino; J. U. Schlegel; J. D. Schmidt; W. W. Scott; N. H. Slack; M. S. Soloway; G. P. Murphy
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1983
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 674 KB
- Volume
- 23
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-4790
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β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
Patients with advanced prostate carcinoma that had been stabilized by orchiectomy (ORCH) or hormone therapy for at least 3 months, were randomized to either diethylstilbestrol (DES) alone or DES plus Cytoxan or DES plus Emcyt. A total of 188 patients were randomized between July, 1976 and February, 1982 of which 161 were evaluable for objective response to treatment. Objective response rates, response duration, or survival experiences were not demonstrably different between treatment arms, either for all patients or within good or poor prognosis groups determined by initial pain or acid phosphatase level. Subjective improvements in performance status were small for each treatment. Pain relief was somewhat greater in the chemotherapyβhormone combinations than in the DES/ORCH, but the advantage was not statistically significant. Side effects were primarily nausea and vomiting and leukopenia, mostly in the DES + Cytoxan arm. The duration of stabilization prior to entry did not influence response overall, although there were opposing trends within each of the two chemotherapy arms. The premise for combining antitumor agents with hormones before hormone failure is still felt to be a more logical approach than waiting for the ultimate hormone failure, and a combination of hormones plus two antitumor agents is being evaluated in a subsequent ongoing trial where a more rigid design limits the duration of the preentry period of hormone stabilization.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
by the National Prostatic Cancer Project randomized newly diagnosed metastatic prostate cancer patients to DES 1 mg orally three times daily or orchiectomy; or DES, 1 mg, three times daily, plus cyclophosphamide at 1 mg/m2 iv every three weeks, or cyclophosphamide 1 g/m2 iv every three weeks plus es
## Background: Locally advanced prostate carcinoma is usually not curable with surgery or radiation therapy. primary hormone therapy is an alternative therapeutic option, but contemporary prospective studies of the outcomes of such therapy are not available. ## Methods: The authors conducted a pr