BACKGROUND. Locally advanced prostate carcinoma is usually not curable with surgery or radiation therapy. Primary hormone therapy is an alternative therapeutic option, but contemporary prospective studies of the outcomes of such therapy are not available. METHODS. The authors conducted a prospective, hospital-based study of gonadal androgen ablation with deferred antiandrogen therapy in 103 men with prostate carcinoma clinically classified as T3- 4NXMO. The median potential follow-up was 51 months (range, 36-74 months), and the median period of observation was 43 months (range, 6-74 months). RESULTS. Each patient experienced regression of the primary tumor, and none experienced significant morbidity from the primary tumor during the study period. The projected 5-year cause specific, metastasis free, PSA disease free (no PSA elevation > 1.0 ng/mL after the beginning of antiandrogen therapy), and all-cause survival rates were 84%, 84%, 68%, and 58%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS. Primary hormone therapy is a reasonable treatment option for locally advanced prostate carcinoma in elderly men or in men with significant comorbid disease who request therapeutic intervention.
CITATION STYLE
Fowler, J. E., Bigler, S. A., Kolski, J. M., & Yee, D. T. (1998). Early results of a prospective study of hormone therapy for patients with locally advanced prostate carcinoma. Cancer, 82(6), 1112–1117. https://doi.org/10.1002/(SICI)1097-0142(19980315)82:6<1112::AID-CNCR15>3.0.CO;2-9
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