Abiraterone and other novel androgen-directed strategies for the treatment of prostate cancer: a new era of hormonal therapies is born

The number of life-prolonging therapies proven effective in the treatment of metastatic castrate-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) has been limited until recently. In the past 2 years several such therapies have come to market. In 2010, the autologous immunotherapy sipuleucel-T and the next-generatio...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Michael T. Schweizer, Emmanuel S. Antonarakis
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2012-08-01
Series:Therapeutic Advances in Urology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/1756287212452196
id doaj-e4959e8165be4aa395ea153a3029b33b
record_format Article
spelling doaj-e4959e8165be4aa395ea153a3029b33b2020-11-25T03:15:02ZengSAGE PublishingTherapeutic Advances in Urology1756-28721756-28802012-08-01410.1177/1756287212452196Abiraterone and other novel androgen-directed strategies for the treatment of prostate cancer: a new era of hormonal therapies is bornMichael T. SchweizerEmmanuel S. AntonarakisThe number of life-prolonging therapies proven effective in the treatment of metastatic castrate-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) has been limited until recently. In the past 2 years several such therapies have come to market. In 2010, the autologous immunotherapy sipuleucel-T and the next-generation taxane cabazitaxel were approved in this setting. However, abundant evidence has shown that CRPC growth continues to be driven through androgen-dependent signaling. Both of these drugs fail to take advantage of this targetable oncogenic pathway. Potent specific inhibitors of cytochrome P450-17 have been engineered with the aim of suppressing androgen synthesis beyond that seen with the luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone agonists/antagonists. Abiraterone acetate was developed by rational design based on a pregnenolone parent structure. Its approval by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) was granted in 2011 based on phase III data demonstrating an overall survival advantage compared with placebo. More recently, other drugs that act along the androgen signaling pathway, such as orteronel (TAK-700), galeterone (TOK-001), enzalutamide (MDV3100) and ARN-509, have shown promise in clinical trials. Some of these are expected to gain FDA approval in the near future. Here, we review abiraterone and other novel androgen-directed therapeutic strategies for the management of advanced prostate cancer.https://doi.org/10.1177/1756287212452196
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michael T. Schweizer
Emmanuel S. Antonarakis
spellingShingle Michael T. Schweizer
Emmanuel S. Antonarakis
Abiraterone and other novel androgen-directed strategies for the treatment of prostate cancer: a new era of hormonal therapies is born
Therapeutic Advances in Urology
author_facet Michael T. Schweizer
Emmanuel S. Antonarakis
author_sort Michael T. Schweizer
title Abiraterone and other novel androgen-directed strategies for the treatment of prostate cancer: a new era of hormonal therapies is born
title_short Abiraterone and other novel androgen-directed strategies for the treatment of prostate cancer: a new era of hormonal therapies is born
title_full Abiraterone and other novel androgen-directed strategies for the treatment of prostate cancer: a new era of hormonal therapies is born
title_fullStr Abiraterone and other novel androgen-directed strategies for the treatment of prostate cancer: a new era of hormonal therapies is born
title_full_unstemmed Abiraterone and other novel androgen-directed strategies for the treatment of prostate cancer: a new era of hormonal therapies is born
title_sort abiraterone and other novel androgen-directed strategies for the treatment of prostate cancer: a new era of hormonal therapies is born
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Therapeutic Advances in Urology
issn 1756-2872
1756-2880
publishDate 2012-08-01
description The number of life-prolonging therapies proven effective in the treatment of metastatic castrate-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) has been limited until recently. In the past 2 years several such therapies have come to market. In 2010, the autologous immunotherapy sipuleucel-T and the next-generation taxane cabazitaxel were approved in this setting. However, abundant evidence has shown that CRPC growth continues to be driven through androgen-dependent signaling. Both of these drugs fail to take advantage of this targetable oncogenic pathway. Potent specific inhibitors of cytochrome P450-17 have been engineered with the aim of suppressing androgen synthesis beyond that seen with the luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone agonists/antagonists. Abiraterone acetate was developed by rational design based on a pregnenolone parent structure. Its approval by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) was granted in 2011 based on phase III data demonstrating an overall survival advantage compared with placebo. More recently, other drugs that act along the androgen signaling pathway, such as orteronel (TAK-700), galeterone (TOK-001), enzalutamide (MDV3100) and ARN-509, have shown promise in clinical trials. Some of these are expected to gain FDA approval in the near future. Here, we review abiraterone and other novel androgen-directed therapeutic strategies for the management of advanced prostate cancer.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/1756287212452196
work_keys_str_mv AT michaeltschweizer abirateroneandothernovelandrogendirectedstrategiesforthetreatmentofprostatecanceraneweraofhormonaltherapiesisborn
AT emmanuelsantonarakis abirateroneandothernovelandrogendirectedstrategiesforthetreatmentofprostatecanceraneweraofhormonaltherapiesisborn
_version_ 1724640910880276480