The male hormone testosterone, generally thought to be a feeder of
prostate cancer, has been found to suppress some advanced prostate
cancers and also may reverse resistance to testosterone-blocking drugs
used to treat prostate cancer.
The finding, by scientists at the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center, is reported in the Jan. 7 issue of Science Translational Medicine.
Medical oncologist Samuel Denmeade, M.D., who led the small study of
16 patients with metastatic prostate cancer, warns that the timing of
testosterone treatment used in his research is critical and difficult to
determine, and says men should not try to self-medicate their cancers
with testosterone supplements available over the counter.
Previous studies have shown that taking testosterone at
the wrong time, particularly by men with symptoms of active cancer
progression who have not yet received testosterone-blocking therapy,
can make the disease worse.
In men whose prostate cancer spreads, doctors typically prescribe
drugs that block testosterone production, but cancer cells eventually
become resistant to this means of reducing the hormone, says Denmeade, a
professor of oncology at the Johns Hopkins University School of
Medicine. At that point, physicians switch to other drugs, such as
enzalutamide, which block testosterone's ability to bind to receptors
within prostate cancer cells.
Denmeade says the combination of drugs that block testosterone
production and receptors, called androgen deprivation therapy, may make
prostate cancer more aggressive over time by enabling prostate cancer
cells to subvert attempts to block testosterone receptors. And many men
on these drugs experience harsh side effects, including impotence,
weight gain, muscle loss and intense fatigue.
"This really is the most lethal form of prostate cancer," says
Michael Schweizer, M.D., researcher at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research
Center and contributor to the study during his recent fellowship at
Johns Hopkins. "It's the one that's the most resistant, and typically
once people progress to this stage it's when we start to worry that
they're at a much higher risk for dying from prostate cancer."
The new study tested an approach based on the
idea that if prostate cancer cells were flooded with testosterone, the
cells might be killed by the hormone shock. The cells also might react
by making fewer receptors, which may make the prostate tumor cells
vulnerable once more to androgen deprivation therapy.
This site is for information on the various Chemo treatments and Stem Cell Therapies since 1992. This journey became bitter sweet in 2014, with the passing of my beautiful and dear wife. Sherry, had fought Non - Hodgkins Lymphoma(NHL) since 1990, in and out of remissions time and time again. From T-Cell therapies(1990's) to Dual Cord Blood Transplant(2014), she was in Clinical Trials over the years. This site is for informational purpose only and is not to promote the use of certain therapies.
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