Chemotherapy and its evolving role in the management of advanced prostate cancer

Advanced prostate cancer has been recognized as being responsive to androgen deprivation since the 1940s when Charles Huggins first described the role of surgical castration in managing these patients. However, androgen deprivation only results in transient disease control for the vast majority of m...

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Main Authors: Michael T Schweizer, Emmanuel S Antonarakis
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications 2014-06-01
Series:Asian Journal of Andrology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ajandrology.com/article.asp?issn=1008-682X;year=2014;volume=16;issue=3;spage=334;epage=340;aulast=Schweizer
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spelling doaj-5c4b864b7351482097333a3e09c60d8e2020-11-25T00:22:45ZengWolters Kluwer Medknow PublicationsAsian Journal of Andrology1008-682X1745-72622014-06-0116333434010.4103/1008-682X.122593Chemotherapy and its evolving role in the management of advanced prostate cancerMichael T SchweizerEmmanuel S AntonarakisAdvanced prostate cancer has been recognized as being responsive to androgen deprivation since the 1940s when Charles Huggins first described the role of surgical castration in managing these patients. However, androgen deprivation only results in transient disease control for the vast majority of men, with those progressing in spite of castrate testosterone levels labeled as having castrate-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC). Until 2004, the therapeutic arena for these patients had remained stagnant, with no agent having shown a survival gain in the CRPC setting. Two landmark publications changed the prostate cancer treatment landscape by providing 'level-1 evidence' that docetaxel-based chemotherapy led to prolongation in overall survival (OS). This was followed by the approval of cabazitaxel in 2010 on the basis of Phase III data demonstrating its efficacy in patients pretreated with docetaxel. More recently, a number of next-generation androgen-directed agents (e.g. abiraterone and enzalutamide) have also been shown to lead to a survival benefit in men with CRPC. With so many new treatment options available, a number of questions remain. These include: how to best sequence chemotherapy with these newer hormonal agents, the clinical implication of cross-resistance between taxanes and androgen-directed agents and which subsets of patients may benefit most from early use of chemotherapy. This review will provide an overview of the evolving role of chemotherapy in the management of advanced prostate cancer in the current era.http://www.ajandrology.com/article.asp?issn=1008-682X;year=2014;volume=16;issue=3;spage=334;epage=340;aulast=Schweizercabazitaxel; chemotherapy; cyclophosphamide; docetaxel; mitoxantrone; prostate cancer; taxanes
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michael T Schweizer
Emmanuel S Antonarakis
spellingShingle Michael T Schweizer
Emmanuel S Antonarakis
Chemotherapy and its evolving role in the management of advanced prostate cancer
Asian Journal of Andrology
cabazitaxel; chemotherapy; cyclophosphamide; docetaxel; mitoxantrone; prostate cancer; taxanes
author_facet Michael T Schweizer
Emmanuel S Antonarakis
author_sort Michael T Schweizer
title Chemotherapy and its evolving role in the management of advanced prostate cancer
title_short Chemotherapy and its evolving role in the management of advanced prostate cancer
title_full Chemotherapy and its evolving role in the management of advanced prostate cancer
title_fullStr Chemotherapy and its evolving role in the management of advanced prostate cancer
title_full_unstemmed Chemotherapy and its evolving role in the management of advanced prostate cancer
title_sort chemotherapy and its evolving role in the management of advanced prostate cancer
publisher Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications
series Asian Journal of Andrology
issn 1008-682X
1745-7262
publishDate 2014-06-01
description Advanced prostate cancer has been recognized as being responsive to androgen deprivation since the 1940s when Charles Huggins first described the role of surgical castration in managing these patients. However, androgen deprivation only results in transient disease control for the vast majority of men, with those progressing in spite of castrate testosterone levels labeled as having castrate-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC). Until 2004, the therapeutic arena for these patients had remained stagnant, with no agent having shown a survival gain in the CRPC setting. Two landmark publications changed the prostate cancer treatment landscape by providing 'level-1 evidence' that docetaxel-based chemotherapy led to prolongation in overall survival (OS). This was followed by the approval of cabazitaxel in 2010 on the basis of Phase III data demonstrating its efficacy in patients pretreated with docetaxel. More recently, a number of next-generation androgen-directed agents (e.g. abiraterone and enzalutamide) have also been shown to lead to a survival benefit in men with CRPC. With so many new treatment options available, a number of questions remain. These include: how to best sequence chemotherapy with these newer hormonal agents, the clinical implication of cross-resistance between taxanes and androgen-directed agents and which subsets of patients may benefit most from early use of chemotherapy. This review will provide an overview of the evolving role of chemotherapy in the management of advanced prostate cancer in the current era.
topic cabazitaxel; chemotherapy; cyclophosphamide; docetaxel; mitoxantrone; prostate cancer; taxanes
url http://www.ajandrology.com/article.asp?issn=1008-682X;year=2014;volume=16;issue=3;spage=334;epage=340;aulast=Schweizer
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