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Medical Forum / Diseases and Disorders / Prostate Cancer / January 2008

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Hormone Therapy. New Study important, it claims.

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MikeHi@anon.co.uk - 24 Jan 2008 20:36 GMT
From Medline. Jan 22.
http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/news/fullstory_60313.html
Full story.

TUESDAY, Jan. 22 (HealthDay News) -- Adding hormone therapy to
radiation treatment for fast-moving prostate cancer can save lives,
but the benefit often doesn't apply to men who have other serious
medical problems, a new study shows.

"The new message from this study is that there definitely is a
difference in outcome, depending on the gentleman's health," said Dr.
Anthony V. D'Amico, chief of genitourinary oncology at Brigham and
Women's Hospital in Boston. His report is published in the Jan. 23
issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association.

The old message, reported in 2004 on the five-year point of the study,
was that treatment to suppress the activity of male hormones known as
androgens improved survival of older men with aggressive prostate
cancer, D'Amico said.

But the new report showed the benefit was limited to men without other
serious medical problems. Adding hormone therapy to radiation
treatment in the 206-man study decreased the rate of death
significantly, but the benefit was confined to men without other
health issues.

"This report is important, because it is part of a story that is
emerging about hormone therapy in men with prostate cancer who are
elderly," D'Amico said. "If a man is 75 and otherwise healthy, adding
hormone therapy is likely to help. If the same man has had a heart
attack or stroke, or if he is a smoker or diabetic, adding hormone
therapy makes it worse."

In terms of clinical practice, the finding means that "before I treat
him, I get him to a specialist and try to get his health cleared up as
much as possible before giving the hormone therapy," D'Amico said. "If
he has heart disease, I would consult a cardiologist; if a stroke, I
would consult a neurologist; if diabetes, a diabetologist."

The idea is not anything new in medicine, he added. "It is the same as
with a surgical procedure," D'Amico said. "You do not give the therapy
until it is cleared by the appropriate specialist."

The study is relatively small and requires further confirmation, said
Dr. Durado Brooks, director of prostate and colorectal cancer at the
American Cancer Society.

"But for men trying to make a decision about prostate cancer
treatment, it provides useful information for the men and their
physicians," Brooks said. "A man who has had radiation treatment, if
he and his doctor talk about the results of this study, it can help
them make a decision about hormone treatment in a more informed way."

The results apply to "a significant percentage of older prostate
cancer patients," Brooks said, noting that the average age of men in
the study was over 70.

Until now, only general advice about hormone treatment could be given
to such men, he said. "Now we can be a little more specific and say,
'If you don't have underlying cardiac disease or other major co-morbid
conditions, the chance of having a good response to the treatment is
better.' But many men with heart disease or other problems may decide
they do not want to deal with the side effects of hormone treatment."

HealthDay

Copyright (c) 2008 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved.
Clarence Crow - 24 Jan 2008 21:21 GMT
>From Medline. Jan 22.
>http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/news/fullstory_60313.html
[quoted text clipped - 4 lines]
>but the benefit often doesn't apply to men who have other serious
>medical problems, a new study shows.

<snip>
>But the new report showed the benefit was limited to men without other
>serious medical problems. Adding hormone therapy to radiation
>treatment in the 206-man study decreased the rate of death
>significantly, but the benefit was confined to men without other
>health issues.
<snip>

I'd have to go along with that, as I'm nearing 73yrs old, and entered
an 18 mth course of hormones (along with radiation) late 2004,
carrying type 2 Diabetes, Osteo Arthritis plus a host of lesser
ailments.

As of today, I'm a overweight zombie with every previous disease
exacerbated, plus a few more becoming apparent.

My PSA at last draw was 0.14 after a bump to 0.20, so I'm a OW zombie
in remission.

-Please reply to group as my email addr is fake!

-Regards CC
MikeHi@anon.co.uk - 24 Jan 2008 22:12 GMT
>>From Medline. Jan 22.
>>http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/news/fullstory_60313.html
[quoted text clipped - 7 lines]
>>health issues.
><snip>

Clarence Commented:

>I'd have to go along with that, as I'm nearing 73yrs old, and entered
>an 18 mth course of hormones (along with radiation) late 2004,
[quoted text clipped - 6 lines]
>My PSA at last draw was 0.14 after a bump to 0.20, so I'm a OW zombie
>in remission.

Blimey Clarence, you really have been going/are going, through the
mill. I'm really sorry. You might be overweight and in remission but
you ain't no 'zombie', (as our overseas friends might phrase it) as we
know from your posts.

Only thing going for you, lucky fellow, is that you're still a young
man, (superior smiley of me with longer beard than you!!).
Well...anyway....what was it those Monty Pythons sang to the bloke
hanging up there??...we gotta, "Always look on the Bright Side of
Life"!
Best regards Clarence and may the new discoveries be with you, this
new year.

MikeHi
callalily - 25 Jan 2008 00:04 GMT
Well, I would like to know what exactly is "fast-moving" cancer.  It
seems to me that if the cancer is really "speeding," they're unlikely
to do the (salvage) radiation in the first place, because the
radiation supposedly kills localized PC, e.g., resideu in prostate
bed.  But I will check with husband's onc about this.  Thanks.

It seems like the lesson is, the more you throw at the ca the better,
if your body can handle it.  I wrote about the underused practice of
adding radiation after surgery for high(er)-risk patients as a
"prophylactic" measure, best before the PSA rises.

Maybe mean high-risk rather than "fast-moving"?   Maybe a better
choice of words would have been high-grade, aggressive.  But we're
back to square one -- they usually don't do RT for serious cases.

Leah

> TUESDAY, Jan. 22 (HealthDay News) -- Adding hormone therapy to
> radiation treatment for fast-moving prostate cancer can save lives,

> "The new message from this study is that there definitely is a
> difference in outcome, depending on the gentleman's health,">
[quoted text clipped - 8 lines]
> he and his doctor talk about the results of this study, it can help
> them make a decision about hormone treatment in a more informed way."

> Until now, only general advice about hormone treatment could be given
> to such men, he said. "Now we can be a little more specific and say,
> 'If you don't have underlying cardiac disease or other major co-morbid
 
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