Metronomic treatment with low-dose trofosfamide leads to a long-term remission in a patient with docetaxel-refractory advanced metastatic prostate cancer

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Abstract

The treatment of metastatic prostate cancer patients refractory to androgen withdrawal and docetaxel therapy is currently discouraging and new therapeutic approaches are vastly needed. Here, we report a long-term remission over one year in a 68-year-old patient with metastatic docetaxel-refractory prostate cancer employing low-dose trofosfamide. The patient suffered from distant failure with several bone lesions and lymph node metastases depicted by a (11) C-Choline positron emission tomography/computerized tomography (PET/CT). After initiation of trofosfamide 100 mg taken orally once a day we observed a steadily decreasing PSA value from initial 46.6 down to 2.1 μg/ l. The Choline-PET/CT was repeated after 10 months of continuous therapy and demonstrated a partial remission of the bone lesions and a regression of all involved lymph nodes but one. Taken together we found an astonishing and durable activity of the alkylating agent trofosfamide given in a metronomic fashion. We rate the side effects as low and state an excellent therapeutic ratio of this drug in our patient. Copyright © 2010 Jochen Greiner et al.

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Greiner, J., Küfer, R., Reske, S. N., Martin, V., Döhner, H., & Ringhoffer, M. (2010). Metronomic treatment with low-dose trofosfamide leads to a long-term remission in a patient with docetaxel-refractory advanced metastatic prostate cancer. Case Reports in Medicine, 2010. https://doi.org/10.1155/2010/395720

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