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Long-term control or possible cure? Treatment of stage D2 prostate cancer under chemotherapy using cisplatin and estramustine phosphate followed by maximal androgen blockade

Authors :
Shinji Urakami
Masahiro Sumura
Koji Wake
Shogo Inoue
Takeo Hiraoka
Noriyoshi Ishikawa
Mikio Igawa
Hiroaki Shiina
Satoshi Honda
Source :
International urology and nephrology. 40(2)
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

Metastatic prostate cancer (PC) is incurable by androgen deprivation therapy alone, due to the presence of androgen-independent/supersensitive cells in hormone-naive PC. A 67-year-old man was diagnosed with PC (Gleason score, 5 + 4) with multiple bone metastases. He was treated by chemohormonal therapy with cisplatin and estramustine phosphate (EMP) followed by maximal androgen blockade, and showed a complete response. As of the time of writing, no clinical or prostate-specific antigen recurrence has been observed for over 15 years, despite cessation of the treatment. This is the first report to indicate a possible cure of metastatic PC by chemohormonal therapy combined with appropriate anti-tumor drugs targeted to both androgen-independent and -dependent clones before the hormone-refractory state.

Details

ISSN :
03011623
Volume :
40
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International urology and nephrology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f0c36fdf9c78003439663373decbefb0