Finasteride May Help Preventing Prostate
Cancer, Study Shows
ScienceDaily
(May 18, 2008) — A comprehensive re-evaluation of the
largest prostate cancer prevention study ever completed produced
new findings suggesting that men and their doctors should
consider a more aggressive approach that includes finasteride to
prevent the development of prostate cancer.
A pathologic analysis of that same study sheds
light on the significance of the cancers found in that study.
Additionally, this study highlights the role of prostate specific
antigen (PSA) scores in treatment decision-making. Researchers found
that even those men who have a low PSA screening value can have
cancer that is difficult to cure.
The two studies will be published online in
advanced of the June 2008 issue of Cancer Prevention Research, a
journal of the American Association for Cancer Research.
The
original study, the Prostate Cancer Prevention Trial (PCPT),
had randomized 18,822 men to receive either a placebo or an agent
known as finasteride, currently approved to control prostate growth,
for seven years. Results showed that
while finasteride reduced
prostate cancer risk by 25 percent, it appeared to increase
development of more aggressive prostate cancer in some men.
Because of this finding and concerns that tumors detected had low
PSA values and might be of little risk to patients, since the
study's original publication in 2003, few doctors have recommended
finasteride for prostate cancer prevention.
From a
new analysis of PCPT data using advanced statistical modeling
techniques and a complete assessment of prostate tissue biopsies,
they concluded that these concerns are now resolved:
finasteride actually reduced
the risk of developing prostate cancer more than researchers had
originally thought, did not increase development of more aggressive
cancers, and the majority of tumors prevented were those that could
spread and cause death.
These new findings suggest that men should
take an "individualized" approach to prostate cancer prevention,
said Ian M. Thompson, M.D., Chair of the Department of Urology at
the University of Texas Health Sciences Center at San Antonio, who
is senior author on both studies, and was also lead author for the
Southwest Oncology Group (SWOG) on the original PCPT results paper,
which was published in July 2003.
"Because we now know that men with even low
PSAs can develop prostate tumors, if a man is worried about his
risk, regardless of PSA score, he can take an agent that is now
proven to be effective in lowering that risk," Thompson said.
Researchers looked at whether finasteride actually increased
aggressive cancers in some men, and by studying biopsies and
prostate gland tissue that had been removed, concluding that it did
not. "Finasteride actually shrank the prostate gland, so it appeared
in initial studies that more cancer was being found in biopsies of
men who took the drug," said Mary Redman, Ph.D., a
biostatistician at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center.
"What that means is that the cancer took up
more prostate tissue in men who were treated, and that is why it was
easier to find in a biopsy. Cancer was probably missed more often in
biopsies of men on a placebo drug because the prostate gland itself
was larger," Redman said.
Redman found that
in addition to a 25 to 30
percent reduction in prostate cancer development overall in men
taking finasteride, there was no evidence that the drug increased
the rate of aggressive tumors and likey decreased their rate by 27
percent.
"We think men should not be concerned about
finasteride increasing their risk of these aggressive tumors" she
said.
The second study examined whether the cancers
detected in the men in the trial who had a low PSA level had
clinically significant disease. With about 75 percent of the tumors
detected on the study were classified as those which could
potentially take a man's life, researchers concluded that there is
no clear-cut PSA threshold that can be considered normal.
All patients in PCPT were to have a biopsy of
their prostate gland at some point during the seven-year trial, so
investigators evaluated characteristics of the biopsy in relation to
each man's PSA score. Current practice is to consider a PSA score of
below four as normal and above four as abnormal.
What they found, according to lead author
Scott Lucia, M.D., a pathologist at the University of Colorado,
Denver, was that while a large majority of the participants
diagnosed with prostate cancer had a PSA that was considered normal,
72 percent of all tumors diagnosed from biopsies in both treated and
untreated men were considered significant. In short, the finding of
significant disease couldn't be predicted by the PSA score, he said.
Most patients in the study who had a PSA score of four or less and
then had prostate cancer diagnosed by a routine biopsy were found to
have significant prostate cancer, while some men who had a high PSA
were found to have insignificant cancer.
That doesn't mean that the researchers support
reducing the level by which PSA scoring should trigger therapeutic
intervention, Lucia said. "Over 90 percent of men in the country
diagnosed with prostate cancer opt for treatment, yet we also found
that even at higher PSA levels, men are being treated for tumors
that would not have threatened their health," he said. "This is the
dilemma of PSA screening. While lower cut-off levels, those below
four, increase risk of detection of insignificant disease, cure is
more likely; conversely, more significant disease is detected with
higher levels but at a greater risk of incurable disease."
It does mean that men need to speak with their
physicians about their PSA, when they should be biopsied, and about
potential use of finasteride, which can reduce their risk, so that
they will make a decision that is right for them, researchers say.
For example, Lucia says, a man whose family members have been
diagnosed with the disease may decide to have a biopsy even though
his PSA is below four. If cancer is found then may opt to undergo
treatment; if cancer is not found, he may choose to use finasteride
to prevent the cancer from developing. Another man may decide to put
off a biopsy, regardless of PSA score, if he is worried about side
effects of treatment.
"These are not easy decisions, especially when
we know now that we cannot rely on what the PSA looks like it is
telling us," Lucia said.
Emphasizing the importance of prevention, "if
given the option of having my prostate cancer found early, getting
it treated and then getting over the side effects of treatment or
never getting cancer in the first place, I'd choose prevention any
day," said Thompson.
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