The role of chemotherapy in prostate cancer. Minireview
Jazyk angličtina Země Slovensko Médium print
Typ dokumentu časopisecké články, přehledy
PubMed
11043822
Knihovny.cz E-zdroje
- MeSH
- chemorezistence MeSH
- hormonální protinádorové látky aplikace a dávkování terapeutické užití MeSH
- klinické zkoušky jako téma MeSH
- lidé MeSH
- nádory prostaty farmakoterapie MeSH
- nádory závislé na hormonech farmakoterapie MeSH
- protokoly protinádorové kombinované chemoterapie terapeutické užití MeSH
- Check Tag
- lidé MeSH
- mužské pohlaví MeSH
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
- přehledy MeSH
- Názvy látek
- hormonální protinádorové látky MeSH
Hormonal therapy in disseminated prostate cancer is effective in 70-80% of patients and prolongs their lives of a mean 1-2 years. Sooner or later, androgen independence develops due to a multifactorial mechanism. A smaller part of patients may respond to second-line hormonal manipulations (antiandrogen withdrawal, adrenal enzymes synthesis inhibitors, corticosteroids). In hormone-refractory disease only about 30% of patients would respond to chemotherapy. In the standard chemotherapy the mostly used cytotoxic agents are anthracyclines, platinum derivatives, vinca alkaloids and cyclophosphamide. However, combined chemotherapy is not more effective than monotherapy. Conventional chemotherapy may improve especially the quality of life. The median survival in chemotherapy patients (6-12 months) is not significantly longer when compared with the best supportive care. In recent years the main concern has been focused on new cytotoxic drugs and different combinations with hormonal agents. In Phase II studies the combinations of estramustine with oral etoposide, estramustine with taxanes and alternating weekly regimens (doxorubicin, ketoconazole/estramustine, vinblastine) show higher response rates (53-69% of patients with prostate-specific antigen decline of more than 50%) and longer survival (13-19 months) than conventional chemotherapy.