Development of castration resistance in prostate cancer patients treated with luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone analogues (LHRHa): results of the ANARESISTANCE study
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Published:2022-09-04
Issue:10
Volume:40
Page:2459-2466
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ISSN:1433-8726
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Container-title:World Journal of Urology
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language:en
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Short-container-title:World J Urol
Author:
Angulo J. C.ORCID, Ciria Santos J. P., Gómez-Caamaño A., Poza de Celis R., González Sala J. L., García Garzón J. M., Galán-Llopis J. A.ORCID, Pérez Sampietro M., Perrot V., Planas Morin J., Abascal José Manuel, Barrond Víctor, Benedicto Antonio, Carballo Ana, Cortiñas José Ramón, Fernández Manuel, Ferrer Eduardo, Guzmán Pablo Luís, López Miguel Ángel, Martínez José Carlos, Olivier Carlos, Peleteiro Paula, Pérez Pedro Julio, Pesqueira Daniel, Ponce José, Ruibal Manuel, Segarra Josep, Solsona Eduardo, Suárez José Francisco, Rosa José, Tabernero Ángel, Vesga Félix, Zapatero Almudena,
Abstract
Abstract
Purpose
Evaluate the percentage of patients with prostate cancer treated with luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone analogues (LHRHa) that develop castration resistance after a follow-up period of 3 years. The secondary objective is to evaluate the variables potentially related to the progression to castration resistant prostate cancer (CRPC).
Methods
A post-authorization, nation-wide, multicenter, prospective, observational, and longitudinal study that included 416 patients treated with LHRHa between 2012 and 2017 is presented. Patients were followed for 3 years or until development of CRPC, thus completing a per-protocol population of 350 patients. A Cox regression analysis was carried out to evaluate factors involved in progression to CRPC.
Results
After 3 years of treatment with LHRHa 18.2% of patients developed CRPC. In contrast, in the subgroup analysis, 39.6% of the metastatic patients developed CRPC, compared with 8.8% of the non-metastatic patients. The patients with the highest risk of developing CRPC were those with a nadir prostate-specific antigen (PSA) > 2 ng/ml (HR 21.6; 95% CI 11.7–39.8; p < 0.001) and those receiving concomitant medication, most commonly bicalutamide (HR 1.8; 95% CI 1–3.1, p = 0.0431).
Conclusions
The proportion of metastatic patients developing CRPC after 3 years of treatment with LHRHa is consistent with what has been previously described in the literature. In addition, this study provides new findings on CRPC in non-metastatic patients. Concomitant medication and nadir PSA are statistically significant predictive factors for the time to diagnosis of CRPC, the nadir PSA being the strongest predictor.
Funder
IPSEN S.A.U. Universidad Europea de Madrid
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
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