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Audio-Digest FoundationUrology


Volume 31, Issue 09
September 1, 2008

The following is an abstracted summary, not a verbatim transcript, of the lectures/discussions on this audio program. If, after reviewing the summary, you would like to hear the contents and earn CME/CE credit, simply use your browser's back button to return to the order page and add this program to your cart. You will receive by mail the one-hour audiocassette or audio CD, a hard copy of the written summary (including a 10-question test), and a CME/CE response form.

Urology Program InfoAccreditation InfoCultural & Linguistic Competency Resources





NEW FRONTIERS IN PROSTATE CANCER MANAGEMENT

From Perspectives in Urology: Point Counterpoint, presented by Grant/Downing Education




Educational Objectives

The goal of this program is to improve the chemotherapeutic management of prostate cancer. After hearing and assimilating this program, the clinician will be better able to:
1. State the advantages and disadvantages of docetaxel as chemotherapy for prostate cancer.
2. Discuss ways of managing skeletal complications of prostate cancer chemotherapy.
3. Describe the general strategy underlying many new chemotherapeutic agents for prostate cancer.
4. Explain why vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) is the target of so many new drugs.
5. Compare the advantages and disadvantages of injections and implants for hormone therapy of prostate cancer.

Faculty Disclosure

In adherence to ACCME Standards for Commercial Support, Audio-Digest requires all faculty and members of the planning committee to disclose relevant financial relationships within the past 12 months that might create any personal conflicts of interest. Any identified conflicts were resolved to ensure that this educational activity promotes quality in health care and not a proprietary business or commercial interest. For this program, the following has been disclosed: Dr. Quinn receives grant support form Sanofi-Aventis, Genentech, and Millenium, and is on the Speakers’ Bureau for Sanofi-Aventis, Millenium, Chiron, Onyx, Bayer, MGI Pharm, Merck, OSI, and Abbott, and serves on the advisory board of Abbott, Threshold, and OSI. Dr. Crawford receives grant support from the National Institutes of Health, Oncura, and the University of Colorado Cancer Center, and is on the Speakers’ Bureaus of Auxilium Pharmaceuticals, GlaxoSmithKline, and Sanofi-Aventis. Dr. Morgentaler receives grant support from Auxilium Pharmaceuticals, AMS, Indevus Pharmaceuticals, Mentor, and Solvay, and is on the Speakers’ Bureaus of Auxilium Pharmaceuticals, AMS, Indevus Pharmaceuticals, Lilly, Mentor, and Solvay.

Acknowledgements


This program was recorded at Perspectives in Urology: Point Counterpoint, held November 8-10, 2007, in Scottsdale, AZ, and sponsored by Grant/Downing Education. The Audio-Digest Foundation thanks the speakers and the sponsor for their cooperation in the production of this program.


CHEMOTHERAPY FOR ADVANCED PROSTATE CANCER 2008—David Quinn, MD, PhD, Assistant Professor of Clinical Oncology, Department of Medicine, the Keck School of Medicine at the University of Southern California; Director and Co-Leader, Genitourinary Cancer Program, and Head, Genitourinary Section, Division of Cancer Medicine and Blood Diseases, University of Southern California/Norris Cancer Center, Los Angeles
Standard of care: does not exist for chemotherapy after prostatectomy or with radiation therapy, even for locally advanced disease
Barriers to providing chemotherapy to patients with advanced prostate cancer: on average, patients become hormone-refractory 2 yr after starting hormone therapy; next step usually requires consultation with physician other than urologist; medical oncologists may downplay side effects of drugs, or believe drugs more effective than they really are
Clinical trials: by 1993, 54 trials of cytotoxic agents conducted in United States on patients with advanced prostate cancer; outcome “absolutely nothing”; first successful trial of chemotherapy for hormone-refractory prostate cancer conducted in Canada with mitoxantrone plus prednisone; found advantage of 2 mo in median time to progression; no survival advantage observed; however, pain palliated for average of 6 mo; currently used as second- or third-line therapy; study 9916 from Southwest Oncology Group (SWOG 9916)—compared docetaxel plus estramustine to mitoxantrone plus prednisone; >600 patients enrolled; survival advantage with docetaxel regimen 2 mo; statistically significant “but kind of disappointing;” availability of docetaxel combination to patients who failed mitoxantrone regimen may have reduced survival advantage between groups; after 1 yr on either treatment, 80% of patients require further treatment for progression-free survival; prostate-specific antigen (PSA)—value as surrogate for outcome debated; reduction does not account for 100% of chemotherapy effect observed; among patients with 50% decline in PSA levels, mean survival 21 mo, compared to survival of 14 to 15 mo associated with smaller PSA reduction; patients who respond may do so to either therapy, but response to docetaxel regimen more likely; in follow-up study, docetaxel administered every 3 wk without estramustine showed >2 mo survival advantage over mitoxantrone; advantage not seen when docetaxel administered weekly; docetaxel now first-line treatment of choice, although best candidates not yet completely defined; confers survival advantage to symptomatic and asymptomatic patients who fulfill hormone-refractory criteria
Satraplatin and Prednisone Against Refractory Cancer (SPARC) trial: enrolled patients who had failed first-line treatment; subjects received oral satraplatin, prednisone, and antiemetics 5 days/wk for 7 wk; control group received placebo; patients continued treatment until disease progressed or they could no longer tolerate therapy; no clinical significance in median progression-free survival (8 days); however, satraplatin associated with better stabilization beyond median time point; satraplatin much better tolerated than other platin drugs (does not cause neuropathy or renal impairment); does affect blood count; all in all, good option for frail elderly patients; investigators concluded that satraplatin of value because it is better tolerated, although it does not significantly increase survival; can be taken orally, making it easy for patients
Skeletal complications: Androgen-Independent Prostate Cancer Study of Calcitriol Enhancing Taxotere (ASCENT)—megadoses of vitamin D given before docetaxel on weekly basis; results compared to docetaxel plus placebo; 125 patients in each arm; vitamin D associated with fewer serious adverse events related to docetaxel; ASCENT-2 enrolled 900 of 1200 patients before being terminated due to excess of adverse events among vitamin D group; results now being analyzed
Zoledronic acid: good for prophylaxis; decreases incidence of skeletal events, prolongs time to first skeletal event; administered intravenously every 4 wk; also associated with trend toward longer survival; patients given zoledronic acid require fewer morphine equivalents to control pain; however, bisphosphonates associated with risk for jaw necrosis (more likely in patients with myeloma than prostate cancer)
NOVEL NEW AGENTS —Dr. Quinn
Overview: targets of new agents are receptors and ligands in milieu where cancer flourishes, eg, bone, vascular endothelium; elevation of markers of increased bone resorption (N-telopeptide) and production (bone-specific alkaline phosphatase) predict early mortality
Metastasis of prostate cancer: involves cancer cell, osteoblast, osteoclast; cancer cell—proliferates in bone marrow; osteoblast—involved in production of sclerotic metastases; osteoclasts—involved in bone degradation; these 3 cell types communicate with each other
Endothelin-1: serum levels normal when patient healthy or disease localized (before prostatectomy); median levels double in patients with hormone-refractory disease; occupies endothelin-A receptors
Drugs that target endothelin-1 activity: ZD4054—blocks endothelin-A receptors; in clinical trials, reduced risk for death by nearly 50% and prolonged overall median survival by 6 to 7 mo (both findings statistically significant); atrasentan—acts directly on endothelin-1; compared to placebo, significantly delays development of bone metastases; however, not all patients respond, and drug does not kill cancer cells; drug slows PSA increase but does not reduce it; in some patients, atrasentan does produce slight initial reduction in bone alkaline phosphatase levels
Ongoing SWOG study: patients required to have bone metastases (believed that only these patients benefit from atrasentan); 3 components—docetaxel (most effective killer of prostate cancer cells in castrate hormone-refractory environment); atrasentan (to inhibit osteoblast activity); bisphosphonates (most effective inhibitors of osteoclast activity)
Angiogenesis: vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) pathway consists of series of ligands, including placental growth factor and VEGF A to D; 3 receptors involved; several pathways, but mitogenic effects on vasculature with endothelial migration most thoroughly studied; this part of pathway may also prove most promising for preventing metastases, which often involve lymphatic vessels; bevacizumab (Avastin) targets VEGF (trial ongoing); other agents being studied that target pericytes (sit behind endothelial cells); suitability of VEGF as drug target— elevations of VEGF portend worse prognosis; bevacizumab alone does not seem to have much effect, but in trial of patients with colorectal cancer, adding it to standard chemotherapy regimen associated with 6-mo extension of survival; in Docetaxel and Prednisone With Versus Without Bevacizumab in Patients with Hormone-Refractory Metastatic Adenoma of the Prostate trial (CALGB-90401), bevacizumab associated with high complete and partial response rates; BAY 43-9006 (Sorafenib)—acts through VEGF receptor; one small study halted early due to rise in PSA levels associated with drug; however, further analysis showed reversal of bone metastases; BAY 43-9006 may be differentiating agent that produces slight elevation in PSA levels, which then plateau; mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR)—abnormal levels associated with advanced cancer of kidney, bladder, lung, and prostate; several mTOR inhibitors now being studied
CB 7630 (abiraterone): targets nontesticular androgenic steroid synthesis; associated with promising effects on PSA levels in clinical trials; oral agent; blocks adrenal steroid metabolism; affects aldosterone as well as androgenic steroids, leading to side effects such as hypertension, hypokalemia, and fluid overload; may be more effective than ketoconazole at treating advanced prostate cancer
Immunotherapy: 2 vaccines (sipuleucel-T [Provenge]; GVAX) showing encouraging results; sipuleucel-T targeted toward single antigen, may not be beneficial if patient does not have that antigen; GVAX polyvalent vaccine, but may not affect appropriate antigens, and may produce more adverse effects than sipuleucel-T; with sipuleucel-T, patients undergo leukapheresis to obtain dendritic cells (antigen-presenting cells [APCs]), which are cultured with prostatic acid phosphatase (PAP), then reinfused; one course of therapy projected to cost $65,000-$100,000; treatment goal to activate APCs against PAP, attack cancer cells, and mediate immune response by activating T cells and other immune cells; GVAX combines 2 prostate cancer cell lines modified with granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor (GM-CSF); injected subcutaneously; objective to mimic antigen expression of hormone-refractory prostate cancer cells
Clinical findings: sipuleucel-T—just missed statistical significance on primary end point (progression-free survival); overall survival significantly higher, but study involved only 127 patients; FDA requested larger studies (now under way); GVAX—phase 2 studies showed partial response and significant stability in PSA levels; in some patients with skeletal metastases, bone scans returned to normal; side effects erythema, pruritus, induration of skin at injection site, as well as flu-like symptoms; outcome exceeded predictions developed from CALGB data (phase 3 ongoing)
LHRH THERAPY: INJECTIONS VS. IMPLANTS
LHRH INJECTIONS —Abraham Morgentaler, MD, Associate Clinical Professor of Urology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, and Director, Men’s Health Boston
History: started as monthly treatments in 1980s; several competing products available; all luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) agonists that initially promote but ultimately suppress testosterone synthesis through negative feedback loop; 12-mo implants available for past several years; disadvantages of treatment with LHRH agonists—negative effects (hot flushes, low libido) persist long after cessation of treatment; some patients never recover normal testosterone levels; effect may correspond to duration of therapy or cumulative dosage (take both into account if treatment cessation planned); advantages—flexible treatment schedule; patient must come to office, so treatments can be combined with physical examination or measurement of PSA levels; patient has reassurance that doctor spending time with him; treatment can be shortened or discontinued whenever necessary; disadvantages of implants—premature extrusion or other unpredictable effects; implantation requires surgical procedure by physician (nurse can administer injections); palpable, sometimes visible; patients may feel slighted if seen only at 6- or 12-mo intervals
LHRH IMPLANTS —E. David Crawford, MD, Professor of Surgery, Urology, and Radiation Oncology, Head, Section of Urologic Surgery, and E. David and Vicki M Crawford Endowed Chair in Urologic Oncology, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver
Duration of implants: several 12-mo products available; 6-mo implants recently approved
Side effects of hormone therapy: decrease in testosterone to castrate levels may lead to hot flushes; injections sometimes associated with injection-site reactions, eg, pain; erectile dysfunction; fatigue; diminished libido; implants can be removed if necessary
Disadvantages of injections: patients dislike injections; injections hurt; hassle factor (inconvenience of repeated visits to physician’s office; time spent by medical staff preparing and administering injections); drugs remain in system for 3 to 4 mo; effects not controllable
Advantages of implants: can be administered subcutaneously, in office, without need for surgery; good data suggest testosterone remains at castrate levels throughout year; removable if necessary; less loss to follow-up, thanks to greater patient convenience; easier inventory control, supply management, billing, and lower associated costs; lower risk for errors; higher Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) codes for implantation and removal than injections; frees doctor to spend more quality time with patients; beneficiaries include patients who live far from office, travel frequently, have busy work schedules, or cannot drive themselves

Suggested Reading

Corey E et al: Zoledronic acid exhibits inhibitory effects on osteoblastic and osteolytic metastases of prostate cancer. Clin Cancer Res 9:295, 2003; Grant JP Jr, Levinson AW: Anaphylaxis to leuprolide acetate depot injection during treatment for prostate cancer. Clin Genitourin Cancer 5:284, 2007; Lara PN Jr, Twardowski P, Quinn DI: Angiogenesis-targeted therapies in prostate cancer. Clin Prostate Cancer 3:165, 2004; Lebret T, Bouregba A: Roles of the urologist and nurse from the perspective of patients with prostate cancer receiving luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone analogue therapy. BJU Int June 11, 2008 [Epub ahead of print]; Marx RE et al: Bisphosphonate-induced exposed bone (osteonecrosis/osteopetrosis) of the jaws: risk factors, recognition, prevention, and treatment. J Oral Maxillofac Surg 63:1567, 2005; O’Donnell A et al: Hormonal impact of the 17alpha-hydroxylase/C(17,20)-lyase inhibitor abiraterone acetate (CB7630) in patients with prostate cancer. Br J Cancer 90:2317, 2004; Schlegel PN, Histrelin Study Group: Efficacy and safety of histrelin subdermal implant in patients with advanced prostate cancer. J Urol 175:1353, 2006; Shiota M et al: Injection-site granulomas resulting from the administration of both leuprorelin acetate and goserelin acetate for the treatment of prostate cancer. J Nippon Med Sch 74:306, 2007; Small EJ et al: Granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor—secreting allogeneic cellular immunotherapy for hormone-refractory prostate cancer. Clin Cancer Res 13:3883, 2007; Tu SM, Lin SH: Current trials using bone-targeting agents in prostate cancer. Cancer J 14:35, 2008; Warren R, Liu G: ZD4054: A specific endothelin A receptor antagonist with promising activity in metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer. Expert Opin Investig Drugs 17:1237, 2008.

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