Treating prostate cancer with combined hormonal-radiation therapy
Androgens, the family of male sex hormones that includes testosterone, function as a fuel for growth in normal development. However, in some men they can also drive the progression of prostate cancer. Hormonal therapy treats prostate cancer by dramatically reducing levels of testosterone and other androgens.
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Hormonal therapy is sometimes given in conjunction with external beam radiation to boost the effectiveness of treatment. Hormonal therapy may also be used to shrink the size of large prostate glands (typically defined as those weighing more than 50 grams) before brachytherapy takes place, to enable proper placement of the radioactive seeds.
Combination hormonal/radiation therapy is now a standard option for men with cancer that has extended beyond the prostate (stage T3 or T4) or whose cancer is considered high-risk based on other clinical findings, with studies showing that it reduces the risk of dying from prostate cancer and other causes more than with either treatment given alone. A study in 2014 found that long-term hormonal treatment (28 months) is better than short-term (four months) for patients in the high-risk category who are also treated with high-dose radiation.
More recently, scientists announced results from an ongoing study showing that patients who have locally advanced prostate cancer should receive hormonal therapy for at least two years after radiotherapy. The study launched in 1992 and enrolled approximately 1,500 men with cancer confined to both lobes of the prostate, or cancer that had spread into nearby tissues, such as the bladder. The data show that after 20 years, men who got the long-term treatment had a 40% lower risk of the cancer spreading and a 33% lower risk of dying from prostate cancer than the men who were given hormonal therapy for just four months. Then in 2017, scientists reported that hormonal therapy and radiation given together were more effective than radiation by itself at treating recurring prostate cancer after radical prostatectomy.
Dr. Marc Garnick, editor in chief of the Annual, believes that combination therapy is also preferable for patients in the intermediate-risk category. Whether men with low-risk prostate cancer would benefit from a hormonal therapy–radiation combination is uncertain. In one important study, 62% of men with early-stage prostate cancer who were assigned to combination therapy were still alive 10 years after treatment, compared with 57% of those assigned to radiation alone.
Combined treatment is more likely than radiation alone to cause erectile dysfunction—and some research suggests that the problem may be less responsive to intervention to improve erectile function after treatment. The research is conflicting about whether any of these side effects persist in the long term. Until more is known, be aware that side effects do occur with combined therapy and that it's important to discuss this issue with your doctor.
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