Treating prostate cancer
with hormone therapy may be hazardous for men with pre-existing cardiovascular
disease
Adding hormone therapy to radiation therapy
has been proven in randomized clinical trials to improve overall
survival for men with intermediate- and high-risk prostate cancer.
However, adding hormone therapy may reduce overall survival in men
with pre-existing heart conditions, even if they have high-risk
prostate cancer according to a new study just published online in
advance of print in the International Journal of Radiation Oncology・Biology・Physics,
the official scientific journal of ASTRO.
From 1991 to 2006, 14,594 men with prostate cancer were treated
with brachytherapy-based radiation therapy. Of these, 1,378 (9.4
percent) had a history of congestive heart failure or myocardial
infarction. Among these men with heart conditions, 22.6 percent
received supplemental external beam radiation therapy and 42.9 percent
received four months of androgen deprivation therapy to reduce testosterone
in their bodies, which can help the cancer grow.
For the entire group of men with a history of heart problems, adding
hormone therapy led to a significant increase in overall mortality.
For men with pre-existing heart conditions and high-risk prostate
cancer, researchers found that by 5 years, 31.8 percent of the men
who received hormones had died compared to 19.5 percent of the men
who did not receive hormone therapy.
"We found that for men with localized prostate cancer and
a history of heart problems, treatment with hormones plus radiation
was associated with a higher all-cause mortality than treatment
with radiation alone, even for patients with high-risk malignant
disease," Paul L. Nguyen, M.D., lead author of the study and
a radiation oncologist at the Dana-Farber/Brigham and Women's Cancer
Center in Boston, said. "Despite Phase III data supporting
hormone therapy use for men with high-risk disease, the subgroup
of men with a history of heart disease may be harmed by hormone
therapy."
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