How effective is Chemotherapy for Prostate Cancer?
Posted on June 4, 2008
Filed Under Cancer Chemotherapy, Chemotherapy drugs, Prostate Cancer Chemotherapy |
The prostate, a part of the male reproductive system, is about the same size and shape as a walnut and weighs about an ounce. It is located below the bladder and in front of the rectum, and surrounds the urethra, the tube-like structure that carries urine from the bladder out through the penis. The main function of the prostate is to produce ejaculatory fluid.
Prostate cancer is a significant health care problem due to its high incidence. It is the most common cancer in men. Prostate cancer is different from most cancers in that a large considerable percentage of men, particularly older men with a shorter life expectancy, may have a “silent form” of this cancer—it will not cause symptoms or spread beyond the prostate gland during their lifetime. Sometimes this cancer can be small, slow growing and present limited risk to the patient. Clinically important prostate cancers can be defined as those that threaten the well-being or life span of a man.
Although surgery and radiation therapy remove, destroy or damage cancer cells in a specific area, chemotherapy works throughout the body. Chemotherapy is the use of specific drugs that can destroy cancer cells. The drugs circulate throughout the body in the bloodstream and can kill any rapidly growing cells, including potentially non-cancerous ones. Chemotherapy drugs are carefully controlled in both dosage and frequency so that cancer cells are destroyed while the risk to healthy cells is minimized. Often, it is not the primary therapy for prostate cancer patients, but may be used when prostate cancer has spread outside of the prostate gland or in combination with other therapies.
Common side effects of chemotherapy depend on the type of drug used, dosage and length of treatment. The most common side effects are fatigue, nausea and vomiting, diarrhea, hair loss and increased susceptibility to infection. To minimize the side effects, chemotherapy drugs are carefully monitored according to the amount and number of times they are administered by your physician. Supportive medication is also given to further help offset the side effects caused by the drugs. For instance, new drugs to prevent nausea and vomiting can minimize these side effects. Most side effects disappear once chemotherapy is stopped.
The drugs used for chemotherapy can be administered directly into a vein while others may be taken orally. Some of the drugs must be given in the doctor’s office or clinic; others can be administered while the patient is at home. Hospitalization is rarely needed unless side effects occur.
Several promising new anticancer drugs are under study and are being added to surgery or radiation therapy for men with stage III prostate cancer. Chemotherapy is also being tried in conjunction with hormone therapy for men whose advanced cancers are no longer responsive to hormonal therapy alone.
Historically, chemotherapy has not proven particularly effective against slow-growing prostate cancer cells. However recent studies show significant promise in advanced prostate cancer.
A number of interesting new drugs are being developed to combine with docetaxel. They include bevacizumab (Avastin), atrasentan (Xinlay) and calcitriol (DN 101) and GVAX In preliminary studies, each of these drugs, when combined with docetaxel, caused substantial PSA declines in more than 50 percent of men as well as symptomatic improvement in men with advanced disease. The four combined drug regimens are now being compared to docetaxel alone in four separate phase III clinical trials. All men with metastatic prostate cancer who are considering chemotherapy are encouraged to enter one of those 4 trials.
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