STEROID HORMONE WITHDRAWAL SYNDROMES : Pathophysiology and Clinical Significance - 11/09/11
Résumé |
Huggins and Hodges18 described the relationship between androgens and prostate cancer proliferation by showing that castration by medical or surgical means resulted in tumor regression. Since that time, androgen ablation has been one of the mainstays of treatment for metastatic prostate cancer. More recently, the concept of complete androgen ablation has been popularized by Labrie and colleagues,22 which involves the simultaneous suppression of testicular and adrenal androgens using a GnRH analog or orchiectomy in combination with a nonsteroidal antiandrogen, such as flutamide. This approach remains controversial, as is the management of patients once they have progressed on primary hormonal therapy. To many physicians, patients who have progressed on complete androgen blockade were considered to be resistant to further hormonal manipulations and traditionally have been treated with nonhormonal approaches or chemotherapy as the next appropriate therapy.
In 1993,19 we initially described four patients with progressive metastatic prostate cancer on combined androgen blockade who after selective discontinuation of the antiandrogen, flutamide, showed subjective, biochemical, and objective improvement. Although withdrawal responses to tamoxifen and progesterones in advanced breast cancer were recognized,17 this was the first report of the phenomenon in prostate cancer. As more patients with progressive prostate cancer on combined androgen blockade were taken off antiandrogen and monitored for response, it became apparent that this was not an isolated occurrence but in fact therapeutic for a significant proportion of the patients.4 , 9 , 16 As the awareness of the syndrome evolved, it became a routine clinical practice to discontinue the antiandrogen and observe before initiating more toxic therapies. It now is recognized that this is a more generalized phenomenon, not limited to antiandrogens alone, and more appropriately renamed the steroid hormone withdrawal syndrome.
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Address reprint requests to Wm. Kevin Kelly, DO, 1275 York Avenue, New York, NY 10021 This article is supported by CA05826, Pepsi Foundation, Tarnapol Foundation, and CaPCURE. |
Vol 24 - N° 2
P. 421-431 - mai 1997 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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