Adjuvant chemohormonal therapy of high risk prostate carcinoma: Ten year results

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Abstract

BACKGROUND. Patients with T3 and/or N1 prostate carcinoma have poor cure rates. The authors sought to improve the relapse free, cancer specific survival of these patients by adding chemohormonal therapy to radiation. METHODS. Twenty five men with clinical Stage III positive seminal vesicles or positive nodes received six courses of vinblastine, doxorubicin, and mitomycin with simultaneous radiation and permanent androgen deprivation. Prostate specific antigen (PSA) testing was the sole criterion for relapse. Median followup was 10.5 years. RESULTS. Treatment was well tolerated. Patients received 91-95% of each drug and all planned radiation. At 10 years the cumulative relapse free rate determined by continuously undetectable PSA levels was 73%, and the cumulative cancer specific survival was 81%. Of node-positive patients, 82% were relapse-free at 10 years. CONCLUSIONS. The addition of chemotherapy to hormonal and radiation therapy is feasible and is accepted by most men when they are openly informed of their prognosis with conventional therapy. Results in the current small series appear excellent and may be superior to radiation plus hormones alone. Larger randomized studies are warranted. © 2002 American Cancer Society.

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Bagley, C. M., Lane, R. F., Blasko, J. C., Grimm, P. D., Ragde, H., Cobb, O. E., & Rowbotham, R. K. (2002). Adjuvant chemohormonal therapy of high risk prostate carcinoma: Ten year results. Cancer, 94(10), 2728–2732. https://doi.org/10.1002/cncr.10527

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