Intermittent versus Continuous Androgen Deprivation in Prostate Cancer
University of Michigan–Ann Arbor · Michigan Medicine · +25 more institutions
Abstract
Castration resistance occurs in most patients with metastatic hormone-sensitive prostate cancer who are receiving androgen-deprivation therapy. Replacing androgens before progression of the disease is hypothesized to prolong androgen dependence.
Men with newly diagnosed, metastatic, hormone-sensitive prostate cancer, a performance status of 0 to 2, and a prostate-specific antigen (PSA) level of 5 ng per milliliter or higher received a luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone analogue and an antiandrogen agent for 7 months. We then randomly assigned patients in whom the PSA level fell to 4 ng per milliliter or lower to continuous or intermittent androgen deprivation, with patients stratified according to prior or no prior hormonal therapy, performance status, and extent of disease (minimal or extensive). The coprimary objectives were to assess whether intermittent therapy was noninferior to continuous therapy with respect to survival, with a one-sided test with an upper boundary of the hazard ratio of 1.20, and whether quality of life differed between the groups 3 months after randomization.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 50.43
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 30
Authors
21- MHMaha HussainCorresponding
University of Michigan–Ann Arbor, Michigan Medicine
- CMCatherine M. Tangen
SWOG Cancer Research Network
- DLDonna L. Berry
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
- CSCelestia S. Higano
University of Washington
- EDE. David Crawford
University of Colorado Denver, University of Colorado Hospital, University of Colorado Health
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Prostate cancer
- Androgen deprivation therapy
- Androgen
- Prostate
- Cancer
- Oncology
- Internal medicine