Review of major
adverse effects of androgen-deprivation therapy in men with prostate
cancer
Lockwood G. Taylor, Steven E. Canfield, Xianglin L. Du
Cancer 2009; Volume 115 Issue
11, Pages 2388 - 2399
Androgen-deprivation therapy (ADT) is a common treatment for men
with prostate cancer. Although ADT is effective at suppressing
prostate-specific antigen (PSA), stabilizing disease, alleviating
symptoms in advanced disease, and potentially prolonging survival,
it is not without serious side effects. However, to the authors'
knowledge, there is lack of a systematic review of its major adverse
effects to date.
The authors of this report systematically reviewed and
quantitatively assessed the literature on skeletal and cardiac side
effects associated with ADT in men with prostate cancer. The PubMed
database was searched for relevant published articles from 1966 to
May 2008, and 683 articles were reviewed systematically from an
original 20 different Medical Subject Heading search combinations.
The focus of the review was on bone-related and
cardiovascular-related outcomes. When appropriate, results were
pooled from articles on specific adverse outcomes, summary risk
estimates were calculated, and tests of heterogeneity were
performed. Fourteen articles were identified that met inclusion
criteria from the original 683 studies.
Men who underwent ADT for prostate cancer had a
significantly increased risk
of overall fracture of 23% compared with men who had prostate
cancer but who did not undergo ADT. Furthermore, men who underwent
ADT had a 17% increase in
cardiovascular-related mortality compared with men who did
not undergo with ADT
Significant elevations in the risk of diabetes also were observed
from 2 large studies.
ADT was associated with an increased risk of skeletal fracture,
incident diabetes, and cardiovascular-related mortality, although
the absolute risk of these events was low. Preventive measures
against these adverse effects and careful assessment of patient's
baseline health status should be considered. |