Archive for the ‘Prostate Cancer’ Category

Insight: New doubts about prostate-cancer vaccine Provenge

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Posted 31 Mar 2012 — by James Street
Category Immune System, Prostate Cancer, Provenge, vaccination

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Fri, Mar 30 2012

By Sharon Begley

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Prostate cancer vaccine Provenge has long incited passions unlike any other cancer therapy.

Doctors who raised doubts about it received death threats. Health regulators and lawmakers faced loud protests at their offices. A physician at the American Cancer Society was so intimidated by Provenge partisans that he yanked a skeptical discussion of it from his blog.

The vitriol dissipated in April 2010, when the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved Provenge for advanced prostate cancer, satisfying investors in manufacturer Dendreon and patients who for years had demanded it be put on the market.

But the bell on Round Two sounded when Marie Huber, a trained scientist and former hedge-fund analyst, made it her mission in the last year to analyze what she believes are deadly flaws in the studies that led to the approval of Provenge by the FDA.

She argues that the main reason Provenge seemed to extend survival – a crucial factor in the FDA’s decision – was that older men in the study who did not receive Provenge died months sooner than similar patients in other studies.

She raises the possibility the “placebo” they received was actually harmful and made Provenge, known scientifically as sipuleucel-T, look better by comparison.

As Huber gains traction, most notably with a February paper in the prestigious Journal of the National Cancer Institute, she, too, is receiving threats. One post on an investors’ message board last month suggested that “somebody smack her with a rubber hose.” An email said “don’t think you will be unscathed in this battle you waged on Provenge.”

Provenge is Dendreon’s only product and the company’s stature with investors has waned with disappointing sales. In 2011, product revenues totaled $213.5 million, far from the $400 million Dendreon initially projected.

The company insists Huber’s analysis is flawed and that Provenge has helped thousands of men with prostate cancer.

“I’m looking forward to getting this to patients around the world,” said President and Chief Executive John Johnson.

FIRST CANCER VACCINE

Since it won FDA approval two years ago, Provenge has been Exhibit A for the idea that a patient’s immune system can control or cure cancer. The first therapeutic cancer vaccine to reach the market, Provenge tries to engineer white blood cells, part of the immune system, to vanquish prostate cancer, which killed an estimated 33,720 men in the United States last year.

Its path to approval has all the features of a heavyweight healthcare fight – desperate patients demanding access to a promising therapy, a very expensive drug that extends life only a few months and efficacy data open to interpretation.

The FDA declined to approve the drug in 2007, when a clinical trial failed to show it slowed tumor growth. That incited protests, lawsuits and death threats against physicians on the FDA advisory panel who did not recommend approval, breaking with the 13-4 majority in favor.

“Provenge came along when we didn’t have much to offer for prostate cancer,” said Dr. Len Lichtenfeld of the ACS. “The advocacy community was bursting at the seams for something that worked. When you have that situation, it inflames passions and that can overtake the science.”

In the pivotal trial called IMPACT, published in July 2010, but shared with the FDA months earlier, Provenge extended median survival by 4.1 months to 25.8 months from 21.7 months. That was sufficient for FDA approval. The vaccine costs $93,000 and patients also incur physician and other charges. Medicare agreed to cover Provenge last year, as have private insurers, but doctors initially balked at a long wait for reimbursement.

Huber had long been “utterly intrigued” by Provenge and its “huge promise of harnessing the immune system to battle cancer,” she said in an interview.

In documents JNCI requires authors to sign, she declared no financial conflicts of interest. Neither she nor her former firm nor anyone else she is connected to stands to benefit financially from her analysis, she said.

Instead, she says she is motivated to help “vulnerable and desperate patients” – so much so that she gave up her job, salary and health insurance. Arguing that Provenge is harming these men, she called “the whole thing utterly horrific. The company got away with hiding data and doctors making $7,000 per prescription won’t even engage in discussion” about whether it helps their patients.

After receiving degrees in biochemistry and bioscience enterprise from Cambridge University, Huber began working as an analyst for a hedge fund in 2007. A Thomson Reuters analysis of securities filings confirmed her former firm has not held any positions in Dendreon.

LACK OF EVIDENCE

Each dose of Provenge is custom-made. A nurse or technician withdraws white blood cells from a man’s arm in a three-to-four hour procedure called leukapheresis.

The cells are shipped to a Dendreon manufacturing facility, where for two days they are incubated with a “fusion protein:” One protein that stimulates the cells’ growth and maturation and another called PAP, or prostatic acid phosphatase. PAP is an antigen that studs prostate cancer cells like antennae, pieces of it sticking out of the cells’ surfaces.

Dendreon says the patients’ white blood cells take up the antigen and within hours their surfaces bristle with fragments of the telltale molecule. The cells are then shipped back to the physician and infused into the patient. A full treatment includes three such procedures, two weeks apart.

Back inside the body, Dendreon claims the modified cells trigger the immune system to produce T cells that kill any cell sporting the PAP antigen — namely, prostate cancer cells.

In principle, that should eliminate the cancer, but Provenge does not shrink either the primary tumor or metastases.

Steven Rosenberg of the National Cancer Institute, a leading tumor immunologist, says that raises doubts over whether Provenge helps patients live longer, as the IMPACT trial reported.

“We have a lot of data that supports the idea that the product works the way it was designed to,” said Dr. Mark Frohlich, Dendreon’s chief medical officer. “We’re seeing evidence of immune-system activation. The only question is whether the T cells are killing the tumor.”

The FDA acknowledges that data supporting Provenge’s approval did not show the drug shrank tumors, but says the overall survival benefit was enough to bring it to market. Spokeswoman Rita Chapelle, citing data submitted by Dendreon, said there is a “lack of evidence of anti-tumor activity,” the reason for which “is unclear.”

SUSPICIONS OVER SURVIVAL BENEFIT

Huber’s analysis comes from data showing that men who received the placebo had very different survival times based on their age. Men older than 65 lived 17.3 months on placebo and 23 months with Provenge. Men younger than 65 lived 28 months after receiving placebo and 29 months after Provenge.

Other studies have shown that age generally does not affect how long a man survives with this form of prostate cancer, says Peter Iversen, a urologist and prostate-cancer surgeon at the University of Copenhagen and co-author of the paper with Huber.

Combining these findings led to the new paper’s conclusion: The four-month edge in median survival from Provenge for all patients was due to longer survival among older men who got the vaccine.

“There is no efficacy in the younger patients, the primary group where you would expect it,” said Huber.

Since the immune system weakens with age, an immune-based therapy should work better in younger men.

Some experts agree.

“If it was really a vaccine, you’d think younger men would show more response, since they are more immunocompetent,” said NCI’s Rosenberg.

On that basis, Huber and her co-authors, including two prostate-cancer specialists, argue the placebo used in the trial may have harmed the older men, cutting months off their lives and inadvertently making Provenge seem beneficial.

One way that could have occurred was through leukapheresis. That process removed about 90 percent of certain kinds of circulating white blood cells, according to calculations by immunologist Laura Haynes of the Trudeau Institute, a co-author of the JNCI paper.

The Provenge men got back about 32 percent of those cells, which had been stored at body temperature. The placebo men got back 12 percent, which had been incubated at near-freezing temperatures. Cold storage has been reported to kill “most, if not all, of those cells,” notes the JNCI paper. Moreover, said Haynes, “if you return dead and dying cells to older men you are likely to cause inflammation,” which can stoke the growth of cancerous cells.

Younger men were better able to replace the lost white blood cells, argued Iversen. Older men could not, resulting in early death.

“These cells are very specialized and there is research suggesting that removing them can harm older men,” he said.

Earlier this month, DynaMed, an online database used by physicians, added to its Provenge entry a note on the JNCI paper, but calls the concern “not substantiated.” ACS’s Lichtenfeld says the analysis “might inhibit some patients and doctors from going ahead with a very expensive drug.”

Huber says she plans to approach European regulators as they consider Dendreon’s application to approve Provenge.

Investor message boards have lit up in response to the new paper. In February, an anonymous commentator on InvestorVillage.com warned that Huber’s work was about to be published “a few days before our earnings. Her agenda is obvious.”

IFFY STATISTICS

Critics of the new analysis argue the number of cells removed is too small to suppress the immune system. Charles Drake, an oncologist and immunologist at Johns Hopkins Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center, said there is no evidence the placebo men in IMPACT suffered more infections or other effects of a depleted immune system than the Provenge men.

The scientist who led IMPACT, oncologist Philip Kantoff of Dana Farber Cancer Center, said colleagues in immunology “dismissed as nonsense the idea that leukapheresis could hurt individuals.”

He takes issue, too, with the statistics. Dividing the men by whether they are older or younger than 65, he said, is “arbitrary” and to pick apart data retrospectively is a statistical no-no.

Dendreon’s Frohlich also criticizes the statistics: “If you do enough of these (post-hoc analyses) then by chance alone you’d expect to get one positive finding.”

In other words, it is almost always possible to find a subset of patients who do better than others.

When Dendreon divided the men by whether they were older or younger than about 71, he added, they found no red flags.

The FDA agrees that such post-hoc statistical analyses “are exploratory” and their results “must be interpreted with caution, as acknowledged by the authors.” Yet a paid consultant to Dendreon before the IMPACT trial agreed with many of Huber’s concerns.

“The control vaccine used in IMPACT and in the predecessor trial had never been used anywhere for anything and may well have been detrimental to patients,” said Donald Berry of MD Anderson Cancer Center, a leading biostatistician. “Here’s a great way to get your drug approved: Kill the control patients.”

Despite the heated rhetoric, Provenge may go out with a whimper more than a bang. Promising new agents for advanced prostate cancer include an oral drug from Medivation Inc called enzalutamide, in the final phase of clinical trials, and Zytiga from Johnson & Johnson, which won FDA approval in 2011. A vaccine that targets PSA, from Bavarian Nordic Immunotherapy, is in late-stage trials.

Dendreon does not disclose how many patients have been prescribed Provenge. CEO Johnson said that about 70 percent of its Provenge revenue comes from sales to community hospitals and doctors and 30 percent from academic medical centers. Some of the latter decline to use Provenge, deterred by lingering concerns over whether it provides a meaningful benefit.

Three such facilities in the Midwest, contacted at random by Reuters, confirmed they do not recommend Provenge. All asked not to be named for fear of receiving threats.

“It is my policy not to make public comments about this drug,” said one oncologist. Patients who ask for it “are referred to another facility.”

(Editing by Michele Gershberg, Ed Tobin and Andre Grenon)

Cancer Research Shows Promise of New Drugs

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Posted 25 Feb 2012 — by James Street
Category Clinical Trials, Prostate Cancer

Clinical Trials Aim to Tackle Lethal Form of Prostate Cancer

By Jason Bardi on February 22, 2012

A group of proteins that lead to prostate cancer metastasis and can be targeted By sequencing genes while they produce proteins in cancer, Ruggero’s team identified a group of proteins that lead to prostate cancer metastasis and can be targeted with a new drug INK128 that they developed.

Credit: Davide Ruggero

Uncovering the network of genes regulated by a crucial molecule involved in cancer called mTOR, which controls protein production inside cells, researchers at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) have discovered how a protein “master regulator” goes awry, leading to metastasis, the fatal step of cancer.

Their work also pinpoints why past drugs that target mTOR have failed in clinical trials, and suggests that a new class of drugs now in trials may be more effective for the lethal form of prostate cancer for which presently there is no cure.

Described this week in the journal Nature, the protein mTOR is a “master regulator” of human protein synthesis. It helps normal cells sense nutrients and control cell growth and metabolism. But in many forms of cancer, this process goes awry, and mTOR reprograms normal cells to aberrantly divide, invade and metastasize.

“Many human cancers show hyperactivation of this pathway,” said Davide Ruggero, PhD, an associate professor of urology and member of the Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center and the Multiple Myeloma Translational Initiative at UCSF. “Until now, we have not known how hyperactive mTOR perturbs the synthesis of certain proteins leading to fatal cancer.”

In the human body, mTOR is a molecular sensor that helps cells respond to favorable or unfavorable environments. Under ordinary conditions, it acts as a master regulator of genes that induce cells to growth and divide. In times of scarcity, when somebody is starving for instance, mTOR shuts down much of the machinery that makes proteins so that an organism can conserve energy.

In cancer, this careful balance is lost. The rogue mTOR protein goes haywire and signals tumor cells to become bigger to divide, undergo metastasis and invade new, healthy tissues. Metastasis is the primary cause of cancer patient death.

“We are now discovering that during tumor formation mTOR leads to metastasis by altering the synthesis of a specific group of proteins that make the cancer cells move and invade normal organs,” Ruggero said.

In their research, Ruggero and his colleagues identified the players that instruct or execute decisions made by mTOR, and they discovered how mTOR deregulates one of the very last stages of gene expression — just before they are translated into proteins by large molecular machines known as ribosomes.

They used a method called ribosome profiling pioneered by UCSF professor Jonathan S. Weissman and Nicholas T. Ingolia at the Carnegie Institution for Science, also authors on the paper. This method basically allows researchers to collect the millions of ribosomes from inside cells and determine which genes they are turning into proteins.

Experiments Focus on Prostate Cancer

Because it plays such a crucial role in cancer biology, mTOR is also an active target for drug development. Several compounds that block this protein, including the drug Rapamycin, have already gone through clinical trials as single agents for treating various forms of cancer such as prostate cancer — without great success.”

Davide Ruggero, PhDDavide Ruggero, PhD

The new research suggests why drugs like Rapamycin have failed. The problem, said Ruggero, is that they block mTOR, but not completely. The newer drugs, however, block mTOR more completely.

The difference is akin to holding a door shut with a piece of tape versus locking it and breaking the key off in the lock so no one can re-open it.

When drugs like Rapamycin fail to completely stop mTOR from working, they allow it to continue pushing a cancer cell toward malignancy. Some newer compounds that block mTOR do so more completely, and the team led by Ruggero showed in preclinical experiments that this effectively hobbles the cancer cells.

Specifically they tested an experimental drug called INK128, derived from a compound discovered in the UCSF laboratory of Kevan Shokat, PhD, Howard Hughes Medical Investigator, professor and chair of cellular and molecular pharmacology and another author on the paper. This compound is now in clinical trials for different types of cancers and is being developed by a team led by Christian Rommel in the La Jolla, Calif. company, Intellikine, Inc., the home of some of the co-authors in the Nature manuscript.

In their research, Ruggero and his colleagues showed that a mouse model of human prostate cancer treated with INK128 did not metastasize. They also showed that the new drug has a strong therapeutic effect on human prostate cancer cells.

“While the experiments were primarily focused in prostate cancer, we believe this work is widely applicable in many tumor types because mTOR is a critical regulator of so many cancers,” said first author Andrew Hsieh, MD, a clinical oncologist in the UCSF Department of Medicine, Division of Hematology/Oncology and a senior member of the Ruggero laboratory. “For example, clinicians Jeff Wolf and Tom Martin are now testing INK128 here at UCSF, in multiple myeloma patients,” Ruggero said.

The research also found that INK128 works better by also restraining abnormal protein synthesis when mTOR is hyperactive. ”Deregulations in protein synthesis is now becoming a hallmark of cancer, and we are very excited by the opportunity to target the aberrant protein synthesis apparatus in many cancers,” Ruggero said.

Andrew C. Hsieh, Yi Liu, Merritt P. Edlind, Nicholas T. Ingolia, Matthew R. Janes, Annie Sher, Evan Y. Shi, Craig R. Stumpf, Carly Christensen, Michael J. Bonham, Shunyou Wang, Pingda Ren, Michael Martin, Katti Jessen, Morris E. Feldman, Jonathan S. Weissman, Kevan M. Shokat, Christian Rommel and Davide Ruggero is being published by the journal Nature as an Advance Online Publication.

This work was funded by the National Institutes of Health, the Cancer Research Coordinating Committee, the American Cancer Society and the Phi Beta Psi sorority. Additional support was provided through Prostate Cancer Foundation and a Department of Defense Prostate Cancer Training Award. Ruggero is a Leukemia & Lymphoma Society Scholar.

Some of the authors of the paper are employed by Intellikine, Inc. One author (Kevan Shokat) is a stockholder and consultant for Intellikine.

UCSF is a leading university dedicated to promoting health worldwide through advanced biomedical research, graduate-level education in the life sciences and health professions, and excellence in patient care.

EVMS doctor is a revolutionary in cancer care

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Posted 21 Feb 2012 — by James Street
Category Prostate Cancer

 

By Elizabeth Simpson
The Virginian-Pilot
©

 

Dr. Paul Schellhammer is a world-renowned urologist, a cancer specialist, and one of the researchers behind the first vaccine treatment for cancer.

During a career spanning nearly four decades, he has delivered the news of prostate cancer to hundreds of patients and guided them through the maze of options that include surgery, radiation treatment, and simple surveillance.

But one day in 2000 when he peered through a microscope at a tissue sample to discover an aggressive form of the cancer, his reaction was visceral:

Pounding head. Hollow feeling in the stomach. Sweat on the brow. Mouth as dry as a bone.

That’s because the sample under the lens was his own.

Twelve years later, he doesn’t call himself a cancer survivor but rather a “cancer participant.”

He hasn’t beaten prostate cancer, but it hasn’t beaten him, either.

He prefers the term “truce.”

Schellhammer, 72, has made plenty of headlines over the years – as a researcher, president of national urology organizations, a groundbreaker in the world of immunotherapy. The cellphone of the longtime professor at Eastern Virginia Medical School regularly rings with people in the field asking his opinion on various new treatments.

Now, in the twilight of his career, he’s making another name for himself: as a prostate cancer patient.

In December, he spoke before a panel at the National Institutes of Health – not just as a researcher and doctor, but as someone who has endured treatment himself and lived with prostate cancer for more than a decade.

The main message that arose from the session: Do we really need to call it cancer?

It’s been 40 years since then-President Richard Nixon declared “war on cancer,” using the language that helped score millions in research dollars that led to screening tools, treatment and medical equipment, including precision radiation and robots and proton therapy.

It also introduced a warrior lexicon that some urologic oncologists, like Schellhammer, now question. Does that mindset work against making reasoned decisions, particularly when the cancer is a slow-growing form?

“When a patient hears the word ‘cancer,’ he feels the need to put on battle gear and go to war against the enemy,” Schellhammer said.

During the past few years there has been fierce debate about screening, in particular concerning mammograms for women and prostate-specific antigen, or PSA, tests for men.

When the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force recommended in 2009 that women younger than 50 not get routine mammograms for early detection of breast cancer, howls of protest ensued. About 15 percent of women in their 40s detect breast cancer through mammography, but many other women experience false positives, anxiety and unnecessary biopsies as a result of the test.

The same task force late last year issued a draft recommendation saying healthy men should no longer receive a PSA blood test to screen for prostate cancer, because the test does not save lives overall and often leads to tests and treatments that cause pain, impotence and incontinence.

That recommendation, too, was highly controversial.

For Schellhammer, the psychology surrounding the word “cancer” plays a role, one he hopes to illuminate by telling his own story.

“Even though I wish he didn’t have it, it’s made him more of a potent force,” said his son, Chris Schellhammer, who works in architectural design in Blacksburg. “The fact that he is living with it for so long and so well puts him in a position to help redefine the public psyche about cancer.”

It comes in the arc of a career that’s gone from a time when the disease was discovered so late there were few options – “Treating advanced prostate cancer was like taking a man’s manhood away,” said Paul Schellhammer – to cancer being discovered far sooner, with so many treatment choices it can be dizzying for patients.

The prostate is a walnut-size gland that is part of the male reproductive system. Prostate cancer is the most common malignancy, with some 200,000 men diagnosed a year in the United States, partly due to advances in screening. But the majority of men have tumors growing so slowly that something else will kill them before the cancer becomes life-threatening. The challenge is distinguishing the fast-growing from the slow.

Schellhammer was 60 when a routine doctor’s check showed his PSA levels were climbing, a red flag of cancer.

He knew instinctively he had cancer, but he was assuming it was, like the majority of cases he reviewed, the non-aggressive type.

He underwent a biopsy, and his look through the microscope at his own tissue showed otherwise. Based on a scorecard called the Gleason Grading System, the tumor was classified as one that needed treatment.

More than a decade later, his reaction at that moment sticks with him. He testified about it before the NIH panel: the mix of anxiety and fear, and the desire to eradicate the cancer.

To put it in context, consider that two years earlier he’d had crushing chest pain that sent him to the hospital, where doctors discovered a blockage in the left side of his heart, a condition often known as “the widow maker.”

He had surgery to insert stents, changed his diet and stepped up his exercise. He recalls the treatment feeling more like a “partnership” with his heart. Contrast that to his reaction to cancer, which instead created a desire “to rid my body of the alien invader by whatever means.”

Schellhammer considered surgery and radiation. Being a surgeon himself, he selected the former route.

He turned to Dr. Paul Lange, a University of Washington surgeon who was involved in the development of the PSA. They had become friends when Schellhammer had treated Lange’s father-in-law for prostate cancer.

Coincidentally, Lange also was diagnosed with prostate cancer a year later and also sought surgical treatment. He’s had colleagues ask whether, had he known then what he knows now, he would have chosen the same course. Lange thinks so but concedes, “It’s become even more complicated and controversial since we had our surgeries.”

A year after surgery, Schellhammer experienced what he calls “the PSA creep.” His levels went up again.

He attacked again, this time with radiation.

A year later, his PSAs went up again.

Then came several medications.

The cancer has not gone away, but hormone therapy has kept it at bay.

“And I’m a much more pleasant person,” he joked.

Schellhammer’s perspective on cancer has changed over the years.

He describes his initial reaction to its presence as “disconcerting” – he’d make sure monitoring tests didn’t come before holidays so as not to ruin the spirit.

Then, disappointment.

And now?

“That’s life,” he said with a wry smile.

The point of his story – his case study, as he calls it – is this:

He’s still here. He’s still working.

Schellhammer considers prostate cancer more of a chronic disease than a killer for most, and he’d like to be a player in showing other people that perspective at this stage of the game – to dispel the fear around the diagnosis, to urge reason and education in making decisions with a cancer in which less treatment sometimes can accomplish more.

He knows that’s a challenge: “As soon as you say ‘cancer,’ the mind shuts down.”

But to that end, after doing hundreds of research articles over the years with titles like “Transitional Cell Carcinoma of the Urethra,” he’s written a personal essay with Lange about prostate cancer. Using his own experience, he’s spoken before panels, discussing the best way forward in cancer treatment.

His office manager, Susie Colson, regularly gives out his writing to newly diagnosed patients.

Instead of fighting a war with the enemy, he has declared a truce and proposed a change in lexicon that uses words like “participant” and “care” instead of “survivor” and “cure.”

The group he spoke to in December was a “state of the science” panel examining protocols for what’s called “active surveillance,” which is monitoring low-risk cases of prostate cancer rather than treating them with surgery or radiation. An intriguing idea sprung from its conclusion: “Strong consideration should be given to removing the anxiety-provoking term ‘cancer’ for this condition.”

The challenge is distinguishing low-risk from high-risk – Lange calls them “turtles and birds” – and there are studies being done, some at EVMS, identifying markers that could better differentiate the tumors destined to kill from the ones that will grow so slowly that other diseases will lap them.

Schellhammer believes the screening and treatment developed over the years is why he is still here. After all, his cancer wasn’t low-grade. But the studies have made it clear since then that many cases fall into the category of not needing treatment.

He hails advances in treatment – there are many new medications on the horizon – but also concedes that the medical technology race, with ever-more-expensive equipment, has fueled unnecessary procedures to pay for the upfront cost of machinery.

But these are not easy decisions, as his own case reveals.

While he’s made peace with cancer, he’s also considered taking Provenge, the vaccine for which he helped oversee clinical trials. It won’t cure his cancer, but it could give him more time. The treatment, though, is covered by insurance only for men who are in the late stages of the disease, a point Schellhammer has not yet reached.

It extends life by about four or five months, but he believes it would help men in earlier stages, maybe even more. Because there have been no trials to prove that, however, insurance wouldn’t cover it. That means he’d have to pay nearly $100,000 for the treatment.

It’s a mental exercise – treatment or no? – that men across the country ponder as options multiply and studies unfold. As Schellhammer wrote in his “Views from the ‘Other Side’ ” essay, the ticking clock, regardless of how slow the tick, “still is an audible and repetitive reminder of the limitations of life.”

Schellhammer continues to practice two days a week with the group he has been affiliated with since 1974, Urology of Virginia. He used to practice in its Norfolk branch but now travels from his home in Virginia Beach to the Eastern Shore office in Nassawadox, which still uses paper instead of electronic records.

“I am able to go there and function as a dinosaur,” he said.

One day in January, he was talking with Donald Harmonson, 54, whose elevated PSA levels first brought him in about three years ago. A repeat test showed the same high level, so a biopsy was done; it revealed no cancer. Now he’s monitored periodically.

Joseph Custis was diagnosed with prostate cancer a year ago, but it was a non-aggressive form, so no treatment was recommended.

“Is your weight still good?” Schellhammer asked. “Your appetite?”

Schellhammer said having cancer makes him a better doctor. He is better at relating to the fear that diagnosis brings, better at understanding the complexities of decision-making.

“He’s honest with them, and around here, honesty goes a long way,” said Colson, his office manager.

The pace and calmness of the Eastern Shore fit well with the course of action Schellhammer is much more likely to suggest now than a decade ago. People’s lives are not as hectic, so they’re more willing to opt for an “active surveillance” rather than “fix it immediately” approach.

His own patients over four decades also have taught him volumes about living with the disease he has spent his career treating. It’s the people who didn’t beat the cancer who taught him the most.

“They taught me about the resiliency of human nature in the face of adversity,” he said. “I’ve learned from them how to accept things and how to persevere.”

Elizabeth Simpson, 757-446-2635, elizabeth.simpson@pilotonline.com

Curcumin May Support Body’s Ability to Slow Prostate Tumor Growth

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Posted 18 Feb 2012 — by James Street
Category Androgren Deprivation, CPB, CURCUMIN, p300, Prostate Cancer

ProHealth.com
February 11, 2012
Source: Thomas Jefferson University news release, Feb 10, 2012

Curcumin, an active component of the Indian curry spice turmeric, may help the body slow tumor growth in prostate cancer patients whose cancers become resistant to androgen deprivation therapy (ADT), a study by researchers at Thomas Jefferson University suggests.

The situation in these patients is that, over time, prostate cancer cells can start to become resistant to hormonal therapies designed to block the release and/or uptake of androgen (testosterone), which is an important male hormone in the development and progression of prostate cancer: Two known nuclear receptor activators, p300 and CPB (or CREB1-binding protein), have been shown to work against androgen deprivation therapy, and with their help, sophisticated tumor cells sometimes bypass the therapy (become ADT resistant).

But the TJU team, led by cancer biologist Karen Knudsen, PhD, have observed in a pre-clinical (animal) study that supplementation with curcumin may support suppression of p300 and CPB.

As described in their report, published in the February issue of Cancer Research, they began by studying prostate cancer cells subjected to hormone deprivation – both without curcumin and with curcumin in doses that were “physiologically attainable.” (Previous studies, which found similar results, had involved doses that were not realistic.)

They found that the curcumin supported greater ADT results, and reduced cell numbers compared with ADT alone. Moreover, the curcumin was found to be a potent inhibitor of both cell cycle and survival in prostate cancer cells.

Next, the researchers investigated curcumin supplementation in a study involving mice that were castrated to mimic ADT. They were randomized into two cohorts: curcumin and control. Tumor growth and mass were significantly reduced in the mice supplemented with curcumin, the researchers report.

These data demonstrate for the first time that curcumin helps the body to both hamper the transition of ADT-sensitive disease to castration-resistance, and block the growth of established castrate-resistant prostate tumors, the researchers say. And “It also has implications beyond prostate cancer, since p300 and CBP are important in other malignancies, like breast cancer.”

Note: This information has not been evaluated by the FDA. It is general information and is not meant to prevent, diagnose, treat or cure any illness, condition or disease. It is very important that you make no change in your healthcare plan or health support regimen without researching and discussing it in collaboration with your professional healthcare team.

Third Peer-Reviewed Study Proves Botanical Formula Fights Prostate Cancer Without Toxicity

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Posted 12 Feb 2012 — by James Street
Category Diet and Prostate Cancer, Herbs, Prostate Cancer
Published: Wednesday, Feb. 8, 2012 – 2:07 am

SANTA ROSA, Calif., Feb. 8, 2012 —

SANTA ROSA, Calif., Feb. 8, 2012 /PRNewswire/ — Scientists at Indiana University, Methodist Research Institute, study a botanical formula that kills aggressive prostate cancer tumors. Their findings, based on experiments in mice using a human prostate cancer tumor model, appear online in The International Journal of Oncology. This is the third published study from a major university to show significant results of this specific multi-nutrient prostate formula against the invasive behavior of aggressive prostate cancer cells, tumor growth and metastasis. The formula combines botanical extracts, phytonutrients, botanically-enhanced medicinal mushrooms, and antioxidants. (Learn more about the formula by visiting www.prostatehealthsolutions.org)

Lead researcher, Dr. Daniel Sliva says, “Multiple studies demonstrate that this prostate formula is a possible treatment for hormone refractory (androgen independent) prostate cancer.”

Suppresses Aggressive Tumor Growth Without ToxicityResults of the study show this prostate formula significantly suppressed tumor growth in aggressive, hormone refractory (androgen independent) human-prostate cancer cells. This study also analyzed the formula for potential toxicity, demonstrating it to be safe with no signs of toxicity at the highest dosages. (To view the study on Pubmed, visit www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22293856)

Researcher and formulator, Dr. Isaac Eliaz says, “This study is a milestone in the research of this formula, demonstrating its safety and effectiveness in treating human prostate cancer in an animal model. These positive results offer a significant contribution to the field of prostate cancer research, and add to the growing body of published data substantiating the role of natural compounds in the treatment of prostate cancer.”

Results of the study show that the oral administration of the formula produced a statistically significant 27% suppression of tumor growth, compared to controls. The study was performed using a xenograft tumor model of human prostate cancer in mice.

Inhibits Genes Involved in Tumor Growth and MetastasisEven more important, in addition to significant reduction in tumor volume, results showed inhibition of the expression of several genes involved in cancer proliferation and metastasis. Three prostate cancer-related genes (IGF2, NRNF2 and PLAU/uPA) that were suppressed by this formula not only control aggressive prostate tumor growth, but also relate to the metastatic potential. It is metastasis that makes prostate cancer deadly. The formula also significantly increased the expression of a gene that fights against prostate cancer, CDKN1A, which works by specifically inhibiting other cancer-promoting cellular mechanisms.

By suppressing specific genes related to aggressive prostate cancer growth and proliferation, and increasing the expression of cancer-fighting genes, this integrative formula demonstrated multiple anti-cancer mechanisms and genetic targets. This pre-clinical in vivo study confirms previously published in vitro data, which also shows the ability of this formula to decrease the expression of PLAU/uPA genes in aggressive, hormone-independent prostate cancer cells.

Study Further Validates Earlier Results This formula was previously studied at research laboratories at Columbia University, New York, NY and at the Cancer Research Laboratory, Methodist Research Institute, Indiana University Health, Indianapolis, IN. These published studies showed significant results in this formula’s ability to inhibit prostate cancer growth and proliferation.

“In summary, this dietary supplement is a natural compound for the possible therapy of human hormone refractory (independent) prostate cancer,” says Dr. Sliva. Ongoing research on this formula in prostate cancer models continues to show encouraging results, and additional studies are forthcoming.

For more information about this groundbreaking study or to interview Dr. Isaac Eliaz, call (707) 583-8622 or email amy@dreliaz.org.

Source:ProstaCaid™ inhibits tumor growth in a xenograft model of human prostate cancer (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22293856)

About Better Health Publishing:Better Health Publishing (BHP) focuses on the publication of key works promoting health and wellness. BHP believes that education and accessible information are the core components of a healthy and sustainable society.

SOURCE Better Health Publishing

Investigational urine test can predict high-risk prostate cancer in men who chose ‘watchful waiting’

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Posted 09 Feb 2012 — by James Street
Category PCA3, Prostate Cancer, TMPRSS2-ERG, Watchful Waiting

Contact: Kristen Lidke Woodward
kwoodwar@fhcrc.org
206-667-5095
Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

SEATTLE – Initial results of a multicenter study coordinated by researchers at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center indicates that two investigational urine-based biomarkers are associated with prostate cancers that are likely to be aggressive and potentially life-threatening among men who take a “watchful waiting,” or active-surveillance approach to manage their disease. Ultimately, these markers may lead to the development of a urine test that could complement prostate biopsy for predicting disease aggressiveness and progression.

Study principal investigator Daniel Lin, M.D., an associate member of the Hutchinson Center’s Public Health Sciences Division, will present these findings today at the 2012 Genitourinary Cancers Symposium of the American Society of Clinical Oncology in San Francisco.

“Prostate biopsies are invasive and don’t always pick up all of the cancer. Post-digital-rectal exam urine collection is much less invasive. If a urine-based diagnostic test could be developed that could help predict aggressive disease or disease progression, that would be ideal,” said Lin, who is also an associate professor and chief of urologic oncology at the University of Washington Department of Urology.

Lin leads a nationwide consortium of eight institutions called the Canary Prostate Active Surveillance Study, an endeavor dedicated to identifying and validating biomarkers of high-risk prostate cancer.

Because many prostate cancers are slow growing and never become life threatening, many men with early stage prostate cancer choose active surveillance – delaying treatment while closely monitoring to see whether the cancer progresses.

Two urine-based biomarkers were found to correlate with indicators of aggressive disease: tumor volume (the number of biopsy samples that contain cancer) and Gleason score (predicting the aggressiveness of cancer by how it looks under a microscope). The markers that mirrored these correlates of disease aggressiveness were:

  • PCA3 – a non-coding RNA that is found at high levels in prostate cancer relative to benign prostate cells; and
  • TMPRSS2-ERG – the fusion of TMPRSS2, a gene that is regulated by androgens, with ERG, an oncogene. These genetic rearrangements are found in about half of all prostate cancers and are thought to play a role in prostate cancer development.

The findings were based on an interim analysis of data collected from 401 men who opted for active surveillance of their cancer. The study compared biomarker performance to clinical data collected at the time of study entry. Ultimately, the study aims to enroll 1,000 men and follow them for at least five years.

“The ultimate goal is that men on active surveillance could use a test based on these biomarkers or others to complement biopsy and PSA data to indicate or rule out the presence of an undetected aggressive cancer or future development of aggressive cancer,” said Lin, who cautioned that these initial results, while promising, need to be confirmed in a larger study that would evaluate changes in these urine biomarkers over time, along with correlation to disease progression during active surveillance. Lin further noted that neither PCA3 nor TMPRSS2-ERG are FDA-approved for prostate cancer detection and that their use in active surveillance is investigational.

Walnut Diet Delivers Promising Results in Mice with Prostate Cancer

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Posted 31 Jan 2012 — by James Street
Category Diet and Prostate Cancer, Prostate Cancer

From HealthNewsDigest.com

Cancer Issues

By
Jan 24, 2012 – 4:22:38 PM

Excluding walnuts to lower dietary fat may not be beneficial

(HealthNewsDigest.com) – DAVIS, Calif. — Mice genetically programmed to develop prostate cancer had smaller, slower growing tumors if they consumed a diet containing walnuts, UC Davis researchers report in the current issue of the British Journal of Nutrition.

UC Davis researchers, with colleagues at the USDA Western Regional Research Center in Albany, Calif., assessed tumor size in mice fed different diets for 9, 18 and 24 weeks. They found that the mice that consumed the human equivalent of 2.4 ounces of whole walnuts daily, gained weight at the same rate as mice fed a soybean oil diet formulated to match the nutrients, fat levels and fatty acid profiles of the walnut diet. At 18 weeks, however, the tumor weight of the walnut-fed group was approximately half that of the mice consuming the soybean oil diet. Overall, the rate of tumor growth was 28 percent lower in the walnut-fed mice.

A low-fat diet is frequently recommended for reducing a man’s risk for developing or slowing growth of existing prostate cancer, but the UC Davis study suggests that excluding walnuts, which are high in fat but rich in omega-3 polyunsaturated fats, antioxidants and other plant chemicals, may mean foregoing a protective effect of walnuts on tumor growth.

“If additional research determines that walnuts have the same effect in men as they do in mice, adhering to a diet that excludes walnuts to lower fat would mean that prostate cancer patients could miss out on the beneficial effects of walnuts,” said lead author Paul Davis, a research nutritionist in the Department of Nutrition at UC Davis and researcher with the UC Davis Cancer Center.

Prostate cancer is the second most common cancer in American men. One in six men will be diagnosed with the cancer, most commonly in later life. But relatively few — one in 36 — will die from the disease because most tumors do not spread beyond the local site, according to the National Cancer Institute.

“These characteristics of prostate cancer make adding walnuts to a diet attractive as part of prostate cancer prevention,” Davis said.

Davis added that some studies have hinted that walnuts may prevent the actual formation of tumors. “But more immediately, our findings suggest that eating a diet containing walnuts may slow prostate tumor growth so that the tumor remains inside the prostate capsule. If proven applicable in humans, men with prostate cancer could die of other causes – hopefully old age.”

The researchers found no single constituent responsible for the beneficial effects of walnuts. For example, the study found effects on multiple signaling and metabolic pathways related to tumor growth and metabolism and that walnut-fed mice had lower blood insulin-like growth factor (IGF-1), a protein strongly associated with prostate cancer.

Walnut-fed mice also had lower LDL cholesterol (the bad cholesterol). High LDL is an established heart disease risk factor, and has more recently been linked to tumor growth, suggesting that the same food that promotes a healthy heart can be helpful to patients with prostate cancer. Finally, distinct differences were noted in the way the liver, a major source of IGF-1 and cholesterol, metabolized the walnut diet compared with the soybean oil diet, despite the diets’ nutritional similarities.

The research was funded by the California Walnut Board. Together with the American Institute for Cancer Research, the board is currently funding a follow-up mouse study to validate the findings and further explore the possible reasons for the beneficial effects of walnuts.

UC Davis Cancer Center is the only National Cancer Institute- designated center serving the Central Valley and inland Northern California, a region of more than 6 million people. Its top specialists provide compassionate, comprehensive care for more than 9,000 adults and children every year, and offer patients access to more than 150 clinical trials at any given time. Its innovative research program includes more than 280 scientists at UC Davis and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. The unique partnership, the first between a major cancer center and national laboratory, has resulted in the discovery of new tools to diagnose and treat cancer. Through the Cancer Care Network, UC Davis is collaborating with a number of hospitals and clinical centers throughout the Central Valley and Northern California regions to offer the latest cancer-care services. For more information, visit cancer.ucdavis.edu.

###

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No Mortality Benefit Seen from PSA Screening

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Posted 07 Jan 2012 — by James Street
Category Prostate Cancer, PSA testing, Watchful Waiting

 

By Charles Bankhead, Staff Writer, MedPage Today
Published: January 06, 2012
Reviewed by Robert Jasmer, MD; Associate Clinical Professor of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco.

Prostate cancer screening with prostate-specific antigen (PSA) afforded no obvious prostate cancer mortality benefit during 13 years of follow-up in a large randomized trial.

In fact, screened patients had a slightly higher prostate cancer mortality: 3.7 per 10,000 person-years, versus 3.4 for unscreened men.

The results emphasize the need to find some means to identify patients who are most likely to benefit from PSA screening, said the first author of a report in the January issue of the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

“Routine mass screening of the population, purely on the basis of a man’s age, is not going to be an effective way of reducing his chance of dying of prostate cancer,” Gerald Andriole, MD, of Washington University in St. Louis, told MedPage Today.

Action Points


    • Prostate cancer screening with prostate-specific antigen (PSA) afforded no obvious prostate cancer mortality benefit during 13 years of follow-up in a large randomized trial.
  • The study found that screened patients had a slightly higher prostate cancer mortality: 3.7 per 10,000 person-years, versus 3.4 for unscreened men.

“Having said that, that’s not to say that no man should get PSA testing,” he continued. “There are subsets of men in the population at large who do seem to stand a good chance of benefiting from PSA testing.

“Those are men who are young, with no comorbidities, and generally very healthy. These are men with the longest life expectancy overall. They are men who, even if they harbor a nonaggressive, slow-growing cancer, are nonetheless expected to live long enough to die of prostate cancer in the absence of it being identified and treated.”

Screening also is reasonable for men who have an above-average risk of prostate cancer, such as African Americans and men with a strong family history of the disease, Andriole added.

The data 0ffered nothing to change the conclusions of an earlier analysis of data from the same study, the National Institutes of Health-sponsored Prostate, Lung, Colorectal, and Ovarian (PLCO) screening program. After a median follow-up of seven years (up to as long as 10 years) the screened and unscreened groups had a similar prostate cancer mortality.

The prostate cancer portion of PLCO involved 76,685 men who were ages 55 to 74 and cancer-free at enrollment. Study participants were randomized to annual PSA screening for six years or to usual care, which sometimes included “opportunistic” PSA screening.

The initial report from the study showed a prostate cancer rate of 116 per 10,000 in the screened group compared with 95 per 10,000 in the control group. Prostate cancer mortality was 2 per 10,000 with screening and 1.7 per 10,000 in the control group.

The current report showed that after a median follow-up of 13 years, cancer incidence was 108.4 and 97.1 per 10,000 in the screened and unscreened groups, respectively. The difference represented a statistically significant 12% increase in cancer incidence in the screened group (RR 1.12, 95% CI 1.07 to 1.17).

Mortality was 3.7 and 3.4 per 10,000 with and without screening, respectively, a nonsignificant difference.

“This article updates with more person-years of follow-up our previously reported finding of no reduction in mortality from prostate cancer in the intervention arm compared with the control arm to 10 years, with no indication of a reduction in prostate cancer mortality to 13 years,” the authors wrote of their findings.

Responding to the study, Otis W. Brawley, MD, chief medical officer of the American Cancer Society, acknowledged that the results are consistent with other studies that have pointed to a potential harm from overscreening and unnecessary treatment of indolent prostate cancer.

“This trial does suggest that if there is truly an advantage to mass [PSA] screening it is small,” Brawley said in a statement.

Even so, the results do not rule out the possibility of a benefit in some high-risk men or the value of PSA screening in men who want the test, he added.

“I truly believe that a man who is concerned about prostate cancer and understands that experts are not certain that screening saves lives, but it definitely causes anxiety and needless treatment, can reasonably choose to be screened,” said Brawley.

“A man who is more concerned with unnecessary diagnosis and treatment might reasonably choose not to be screened. It is an area that needs to be left to an informed patient.”

Proton Therapy for Prostate Cancer

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Posted 15 Dec 2011 — by James Street
Category Prostate Cancer, Proton Beam, Proton Beam, Proton Beam Therapy, Radiation
By Bradford Hoppe, MD, MPH1, Randal Henderson, MD, MBA1, William M. Mendenhall, MD1, Romaine C. Nichols, MD1, Zuofeng Li, PhD1, Nancy P. Mendenhall, MD1 | June 15, 2011
1University of Florida Proton Therapy Institute, Jacksonville, Florida (www.floridaproton.org)

 

ABSTRACT: Proton therapy has been used in the treatment of cancer for over 50 years. Due to its unique dose distribution with its spread-out Bragg peak, proton therapy can deliver highly conformal radiation to cancers located adjacent to critical normal structures. One of the important applications of its use is in prostate cancer, since the prostate is located adjacent to the rectum and bladder. Over 30 years of data have been published on the use of proton therapy in prostate cancer; these data have demonstrated high rates of local and biochemical control as well as low rates of urinary and rectal toxicity. Although before 2000 proton therapy was available at only a couple of centers in the United States, several new proton centers have been built in the last decade. With the increased availability of proton therapy, research on its use for prostate cancer has accelerated rapidly. Current research includes explorations of dose escalation, hypofractionation, and patient-reported quality-of-life outcomes. Early results from these studies are promising and will likely help make proton therapy for the treatment of prostate cancer more cost-effective.

Introduction

Proton therapy (PT) has been used in the management of cancer for over 50 years. The unique pattern of radiation dose deposition associated with protons—the characteristic spread-out Bragg peak (SOBP)—was recognized as early as the 1950s as a tool that radiation oncologists could use to deliver highly conformal radiotherapy to cancers located adjacent to critical organs. Until 1991, PT was only available at physics research centers; these facilities typically offered relatively low-energy protons delivered through a fixed beam, so clinical applications were limited. The prostate, with its close proximity to the rectum, bowel, and bladder, was recognized early on as an ideal site for the application of PT. At the Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, PT was used as a “boost” to conventional radiation therapy in prostate cancer as early as the late 1970s.[1] The first clinically dedicated facility opened at Loma Linda University in Loma Linda, California in 1991, complete with sufficiently high-energy protons to penetrate to central tumors, with a gantry system to deliver PT from any angle, and offering treatment of prostate cancer solely with PT. Early results of PT from these two institutions have been promising, leading to a burgeoning interest in PT for prostate cancer at other institutions that have acquired PT. While there is much theoretical and early clinical promise, many questions remain regarding the degree of potential benefit and the cost-effectiveness of PT in prostate cancer. This review discusses the rationale, history, and current status of PT for prostate cancer—and controversies regarding it.

Rationale: The Physics of Proton Therapy and X-Ray Therapy

The patterns of radiation dose deposition in tissue associated with PT and X-ray therapy (XRT) differ significantly. With XRT, most X-rays pass through the patient, depositing radiation energy along the beam path and leaving a track of radiation damage, much like that left by a bullet, from the skin surface through which the beam enters to the skin surface through which it exits. Because the X-rays in these interactions are absorbed, the dose deposited along the beam path is reduced gradually as the X-ray beam passes through the patient. Since radiation damage is proportional to dose and not specific to cancer cells, this pattern of dose deposition with X-rays delivers more dose to nontargeted normal tissue. This unnecessary dose to the nontargeted normal tissue contributes considerably to the “integral dose” (dose deposited in the entire patient body).

Historically, there have been two basic strategies for dealing with the problem of integral dose with X-rays: 1) the use of higher-energy X-rays, which reduces the dose to normal tissues within the first few centimeters of the entrance path, and 2) the use of additional X-ray beams whose paths overlap only over the targeted tumor, which increases the dose to the cancer relative to the dose to any particular section of normal nontargeted tissue, at the expense of exposing more normal tissue to low doses of radiation. This second strategy is the basis for three-dimensional conformal radiation therapy (3DCRT), stereotactic radiosurgery and stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT), Cyberknife, intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT), image-guided IMRT, and volumetric modulated arc therapy.

Most XRT for prostate cancer is delivered with an IMRT technique. IMRT is a sophisticated XRT technique that employs multiple radiation beams aimed at the target from different directions, with the beams varying in size and shape during treatment delivery to create a highly conformal radiation dose distribution in which the volume of tissue receiving a “high” dose of radiation conforms precisely to the three-dimensional (3D) volume of the target. This technique is a significant improvement over simpler, conventional radiation therapy techniques used historically, which deliver a high radiation dose to a volume of tissue that is much larger and less conformal—and that thus includes substantially more normal tissue. However, because of the increased number of X-ray beams used with IMRT, a much larger volume of non-targeted tissue receives low radiation doses than is the case with the simpler conventional radiation therapy techniques. With IMRT, as in other XRT techniques based on overlapping beams, integral dose is redistributed over a larger volume of nontargeted tissue compared with simpler historical techniques, but it is not reduced.

In contrast to X-rays, protons have mass and thus do not travel an infinite distance; rather, they stop in tissue at a distance proportional to their acceleration. In addition, protons are 1,800 times as heavy as electrons, the primary subatomic particles with which they collide. Unlike X-rays, which are absorbed in these interactions, protons lose relatively little energy along the beam path until the end of their range, at which point they lose the majority of their energy, producing a characteristic sharp peak in radiation energy deposition known as the Bragg peak. Thus, a typical proton beam disperses a low constant dose of radiation along the entrance path of the beam, a high uniform dose throughout the range of the SOBP, and no exit dose, eliminating much of the integral dose inherent in X-ray therapy. In contrast to XRT, the majority of radiation energy from a proton beam is actually deposited in the targeted cancer. Because the width of the Bragg peak is only 4 to 7 mm, in actual clinical practice, an SOBP is produced by adding a series of proton beams with appropriate energies to cover the full thickness of a particular target with a uniform dose.

FIGURE 1
A Comparison of Typical Radiation Dose Distributions Achieved With PT and IMRT for a Patient With Low-Risk Prostate Cancer
FIGURE 2
Dose-Volume Comparison of Intensity-Modulated Radiotherapy (IMRT) and Proton Therapy in Patients with Prostate Cancer

Figure 1 is a comparison of typical radiation dose distributions achieved with PT and IMRT for a patient with low-risk prostate cancer. The relative radiation dose levels are indicated by the color wash, with red representing the highest radiation doses and blue indicating the lowest doses. As is apparent, there is a higher integral dose with IMRT compared with PT; with PT, a much larger proportion of the rectum receives either no radiation dose or only a very small dose. Figure 2 shows a comparison of dose-volume histograms for the rectum and bladder with the PT and IMRT treatment plans. The x-axis charts radiation dose and the y-axis charts the percentage of organ receiving the corresponding dose. Due to the proximity of the anterior wall of the rectum and the base of the bladder to the prostate, the volumes of these organs receiving high radiation doses are similar for the IMRT and PT plans. However, there are significant differences in the volumes of bladder and rectum receiving medium- and low-dose radiation in the PT plan compared with the IMRT plan.[2] It should be noted that proton therapy for prostate treatments is typically delivered using two lateral or slightly lateral oblique beams, taking full advantage of the ability of protons to stop before the contralateral femoral heads. Proton beams at such large depths do not necessasrily possess an advantage of reduced beam penumbra compared with IMRT treatments, as pointed out by Goitein.[3] However, the ability of proton prostate therapy to avoid beam entrance and exit through bladder and rectum allows maximum sparing of these critical organs, such that large percentages of these volumes receive essentially no dose. At the same time, the robustness of such beam arrangements has been shown to be adequate for intra-fraction prostate movements up to 5 mm.[4] Given the growing body of literature demonstrating an association between gastrointestinal (GI) and genitourinary (GU) complications with dose-volume histograms of the rectum and bladder, including the volumes receiving low and moderates doses, the reduction in integral dose to these structures with PT will likely translate into fewer GU and GI toxicities.[5,6]

Along with the lower dose to the rectum and bladder, the lower integral radiation dose with PT compared with XRT may result in other benefits to patients with prostate cancer. The relationship between the volume of tissue exposed to low radiation doses and secondary malignancies has been established in pediatric cancers.[7,8] Fontenot et al[9] of the MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston have evaluated the risk of secondary malignancies with IMRT compared with PT in patients with early-stage prostate cancer and have shown that PT should reduce the risk of secondary malignancies by 26% to 39% compared with IMRT. Due to concerns regarding urinary incontinence and erectile dysfunction with surgery, the use of radiotherapy in younger men with prostate cancer has increased. Particularly in these younger patients with prostate cancer, PT may result in a measurably lower rate of secondary malignancy than is seen with IMRT.

Integral dose may affect other organs located close to the treatment field. Some investigators have suggested that the low-dose scatter radiation to the testes from 3DCRT, IMRT, and SBRT may reduce testosterone levels.[10-12] However, in a study from the University of Florida Proton Therapy Institute in Jacksonville, PT had no significant effect on testosterone levels in patients during the first 2 years of follow-up.[13] It is possible that preserving testosterone levels may result in preservation of libido and prevention of fatigue following treatment. Doses to the penile bulb may be less with PT than with IMRT, which may also help preserve erectile function after radiation therapy. Not all structures, however, receive less integral dose with PT than with XRT. In a study from Massachusetts General Hospital,[14] Trofimov demonstrated higher doses to the femoral neck with PT. This has led to some concern regarding the possibility of an increased risk of femoral neck fractures in patients treated with PT.[15] In an analysis from the University of Florida Proton Therapy Institute with a median follow-up of 2 years, no increased risk in hip fracture was observed among 400 consecutive men treated with PT compared with the number of fractures expected in this population, based on patient comorbidities and as determined by the World Health Organization FRAX tool for assessing hip fracture risk.[16]

The History of Proton Therapy in Prostate Cancer

Proton therapy as a conformal boost after conventional radiation therapy

Prior to 3D imaging and 3DCRT, radiation doses for prostate cancer were limited to 70 Gy or less because of the morbidity associated with high integral doses to large volumes of the bladder and rectum.[17-19] During this era, surgery was the preferred treatment for prostate cancer because of relatively high probabilities of tumor recurrence with radiation as well as high morbidity rates.[18,20] PT was available only in physics research centers, which provided a beam of protons emanating from a fixed beam line, generally of limited energies insufficient for penetration to deep-seated tumors. The initial studies of PT in prostate cancer came from Massachusetts General Hospital and used a 160-MeV proton beam from the Harvard cyclotron. In their first published study, Shipley et al reported on 17 patients treated with conventional megavoltage X-rays to between 48 and 50 Gy followed by a proton boost applied through a perineal field to a final dose of 70 to 76.5 Gy/CGE.[1] Although one patient relapsed 18 months after therapy, the remaining patients did well. A follow-up study by the Massachusetts General Hospital group[21] compared two cohorts of patients: one treated with megavoltage X-rays alone to 67 Gy and the other treated with 50 Gy of XRT followed by a proton boost of 20 to 26.5 CGE. Despite higher doses in the PT cohort, no significant difference was found regarding GU or GI toxicity between the two groups. Following the phase I/II study, Massachusetts General Hospital conducted the first phase III PT study randomly assigning patients with stage T3-4 prostate cancer to treatment with either high-dose radiation with 75.6 CGE (via 50.4 Gy X-rays and 25.2-CGE proton boost; n = 103) or with 67.2 Gy X-rays (n = 99).[22] After a median follow-up of 5 years, no significant differences were found in overall survival or disease-specific survival. However, patients with poorly differentiated prostate cancer (Gleason score ≥ 7) had better local control (LC) with high-dose radiotherapy (5-year LC, 94% vs 64%; P = .0014). Also, there was a trend toward improved LC with high-dose radiation for the cohort as a whole (5-year LC, 92% vs 80%; P = .089), and GU and GI toxicity were not significantly different.

FIGURE 3
Sagittal (A) and Transverse (B) colorwash of a typical perineal proton boost

Proton therapy as sole treatment for prostate cancer

In 1991, Loma Linda University Medical Center opened the first clinically dedicated PT facility with higher-energy (250-MeV) protons and a gantry system similar to those available for conventional XRT, thereby permitting PT delivery to deep-seated tumors and from any angle. Loma Linda University conducted a phase I/II study using a higher-energy proton beam that allowed the delivery of PT via lateral fields through the hip, instead of the perineal approach used at Massachusetts General Hospital (Figure 3). The study included 104 patients treated with 45 Gy of X-rays and a 30-CGE boost with PT.[23] With a median follow-up of 20 months, no grade 3 or 4 morbidity was observed and only 12% of patients had a grade 1 or 2 late morbidity (8% rectal and 4% urinary). Two-year local disease control rates were encouraging, with only 2.8% developing progression. In a follow-up report on 319 patients (median follow-up, 43 months) who were treated with PT to 74 to 75 CGE either as a boost following conventional radiation therapy (n = 93) or as sole treatment (n = 226), the 5-year biochemical failure–free survival (BFFS) in the entire cohort was 88%, with no Radiation Therapy Oncology Group (RTOG) grade 3 or 4 GU or GI toxicities.[24] Importantly, this was the first study to report long-term outcomes of patients who were treated solely with PT. In the most recent update of the Loma Linda University experience, Slater et al[25] reported on 1,255 patients (median follow-up, 63 months) who were treated either with protons alone (n = 524) or with a proton boost (n = 731) to total doses of 74 to 75 CGE; 5-year BFFS was 75%, and the rate of late grade 3+ GU or GI toxicities was < 1%.

Proton therapy as a means for dose escalation: Proton Radiation Oncology Group trial 95-09

Considering the promising data emerging from Massachusetts General Hospital and Loma Linda University, a collaboration called Proton Radiation Oncology Group (PROG) developed between the two institutions, supported by the American College of Radiology (ACR). The first trial, PROG 95-05, conducted from 1996 to 1999, randomly assigned 393 men with T1b-2b prostate cancer and a prostate-specific antigen (PSA) level < 15 ng/mL to receive treatment with either low-dose (70.2 Gy/CGE) or high-dose (79.2 Gy/CGE) radiation. The radiation was comprised of a proton “boost” with either 19.8 CGE or 28.8 CGE via opposed lateral 250-mV proton beams at Loma Linda University or via a single en-face 160-mV proton beam through the perineum at Massachusetts General Hospital, followed by 50.4 Gy with 3DCRT. The goal of the study was not to compare protons with X-rays, but to determine whether dose escalation with PT would improve outcomes. In the first outcome report, which had a median follow-up of 5.5 years, Zietman et al[26] reported a statistically significant improvement in 5-year BFFS in the high-dose arm of 80.4% compared with 61.4% in the low-dose arm. Although the study appeared to be positive, demonstrating the feasibility of dose escalation with PT and improved disease control with dose escalation, critics of the study pointed out that both treatment arms did rather poorly compared with other contemporary studies of radiation therapy in prostate cancer. On re-evaluation of the data, Zietman et al[27] identified a considerable statistical error in the initial report. The updated outcomes demonstrated a 5-year BFFS of 91.3% with high-dose therapy compared with 78.8% for low-dose therapy (P < .001), which translated to a 59% reduction in the risk of failure. These BFFS rates were much higher than in the initial evaluation, and similar to those in other published studies. In the most recent update,[28] the group reported 10-year BFFS rates of 83.3% and 67.6% for high-dose and low-dose radiotherapy, respectively. The BFFS in patients with low-risk disease was 93% at 10 years. Importantly, the study demonstrated extremely low rates of grade > 3 GU (2%) and GI (1%) toxicity, even in the high-dose arm.

Contemporary Proton Therapy for Prostate Cancer

Over the last decade, more proton centers have been built in the United States and abroad. PT for prostate cancer has been investigated at these newer centers using treatment guidelines similar to those used at Loma Linda University, with PT for the entire course of treatment to maximize the dosimetric benefit of PT over X-ray radiation.

TABLE
Review of the Literature on Proton Therapy for Prostate Cancer

The University of Florida Proton Therapy Institute recently reported the early outcomes of 211 patients enrolled in one of three treatment protocols, including a low-risk protocol delivering 78 CGE at 2 CGE per fraction, an intermediate-risk protocol of dose escalation from 78 CGE to 82 CGE at 2 CGE per fraction, and a high-risk protocol of 78 CGE at 2 CGE per fraction with concomitant docetaxel(Drug information on docetaxel) (Taxotere) followed by androgen deprivation therapy.[6] With a minimum follow-up of 2 years, the grade > 3 GU toxicity rate was 1.9% and the grade > 3 GI toxicity rate was < 0.5%. Two studies out of Japan have also published early outcomes for PT for prostate cancer. Mayahara et al[29] reported on 287 patients treated to 74 CGE with 190- to 230-MeV protons using opposed lateral fields; the rate of grade > 3 GU toxicity in this study was 1%, and the rate of grade > 3 GI toxicity was 0%. Nihei et al[30] reported on a multi-institutional phase II study from Japan in which 74 CGE was delivered in 37 fractions in 151 patients. With a median follow-up of 43 months, only 1% of patients developed grade > 3 GU toxicity, and 0% developed late grade > 3 GI toxicity. These studies, which are reported in the Table, confirm the safety of PT for prostate cancer over the first 4 years following treatment; however, longer follow-up is needed to confirm the low rate of late toxicity and long-term efficacy of the treatment (and the high rate of BFFS). Interestingly, Massachusetts General Hospital and Loma Linda University have reported a smaller series of patients treated with PT alone to 82 CGE, with a slightly higher rate of toxicity than observed in the University of Florida Proton Therapy Institute series with the same dose and dose per fraction.[31]

Cost-Effectiveness of Proton Therapy

Although the benefits to patients of reduced radiation-dose exposure with PT are quite obvious, concerns still exist regarding whether these dosimetric benefits are cost-effective. In a study by Konski et al,[32] the cost-effectiveness of PT was compared to that of IMRT with the assumption that PT could deliver a 10-Gy higher dose than IMRT, resulting in a 10% improvement in 5-year BFFS compared with IMRT. However, despite the improvement in BFFS, the resulting cost of PT for a 60-year-old man was $65,000, compared with $40,000 for IMRT, which would result in a cost-effectiveness of $56,000 per quality-adjusted life year (QALY). When compared to the commonly accepted standard of $50,000 per QALY, the value for PT indicated that it was not cost-effective. Although this study reaches some intriguing conclusions, the results are based on models and do not take into consideration a number of critical factors. First, Peeters et al[33] have predicted that PT may allow for hypofractionation, which would reduce the treatment costs of this therapy. Studies currently investigating hypofractionation with PT are ongoing at both Loma Linda University and the University of Florida Proton Therapy Institute. Second, a reduction in significant rectal and urinary toxicity afforded by PT will have a positive impact on overall costs of care in prostate cancer patients. Finally, the dose escalation and dose intensification via hypofractionation permitted by PT may result in increased cure rates, particularly in intermediate- and high-risk prostate cancer patients,[34] which may also translate into reduced costs of care.

REFERENCE GUIDE


Therapeutic Agents
Mentioned in This Article


Docetaxel (Taxotere)


Brand names are listed in parentheses only if a drug is not available generically and is marketed as no more than two trademarked or registered products. More familiar alternative generic designations may also be included parenthetically.

A Randomized Study Comparing Photons and Protons?

There has already been a great deal of discussion in the literature regarding the feasibility of a randomized study comparing PT and IMRT for prostate cancer, which is an issue beyond the scope of this review.[35-38] It is unclear how much dose escalation and dose intensification the improved dose distribution from PT will permit. Thus, at this point in time, the degree of benefit achievable with PT is unknown, so it seems premature to commit significant resources to a randomized trial testing a mature technology against an immature technology. Funds and research resources would be better spent at this point in developing PT and in determining how best to maximize its benefits.

Conclusions

PT is a promising treatment option for prostate cancer patients. Studies have already demonstrated extremely low rates of grade > 3 GU and GI toxicities and extremely high disease control, presumably related to improved radiation dose distributions over what can be achieved with IMRT. More follow-up is needed to confirm the promising early results. A reduction in the integral dose to the body with PT compared to XRT may have other important implications in the future, including a decrease in secondary-malignancy risks.

Financial Disclosure: The authors have no significant financial interest or other relationship with the manufacturers of any products or providers of any service mentioned in this article.

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14. Trofimov A, Nguyen PL, Coen JJ, et al. Radiotherapy treatment of early-stage prostate cancer with IMRT and protons: a treatment planning comparison. Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys. 2007;69:444-53.

15. Institute for Clinical and Economic Review (ICER). Management options for low-risk prostate cancer. 2010.

16. Valery JR, Hoppe BS, Henderson R, et al. Risk of hip and femoral neck fractures following proton therapy for prostate cancer. [Abstr.] Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys. 2010;78:S192-S193.

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Panel: ‘Watchful Wait’ OK For Many Prostate Cancers

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Posted 09 Dec 2011 — by James Street
Category Prostate Cancer, Watchful Waiting

National Public Radio

LINDA WERTHEIMER, HOST:

A federal expert panel says that most prostate cancer these days should not be called cancer at all. Most of these tumors would never threaten the lives of the men who have them. So, the panel says, most men who are diagnosed with prostate cancer should be given the choice of postponing treatment. NPR’s Richard Knox has the story.

RICHARD KNOX, BYLINE: It’s kind of a startling pronouncement. The most common cancer in men may, most of the time, not really be cancer.

DR. PATRICIA GANZ: Cancer equals death for most people. Everything that is labeled cancer by the medical community does not have the same meaning for the patient.

KNOX: That’s Dr. Patricia Ganz of the University of California Los Angeles. She led the panel, which was convened by the National Institutes of Health. The group says that up to 70 percent of men with newly diagnosed prostate cancer have tumors that don’t necessarily need immediate surgery and radiation because they’re so slow-growing. That’s as many as 168,000 men a year.

GANZ: We feel sufficiently confident for these very low-risk cancers that this is one that’s not going to move very fast and there’s no urgency to treat it with curative intent.

KNOX: And yet only one in ten of these men are currently given the choice of putting off treatment and monitoring the situation to see what happens. Ganz says it’ll take time to bring around many doctors to the idea that most prostate cancers don’t necessarily need to be treated.

GANZ: There obviously are financial motivations, you know, if someone’s going to get paid for surgery or radiation. We also heard that wives and family members are often saying, you know, whatcha waiting for? You know, just get it cut out. You know, there’s no big deal.

KNOX: The expert panel wasn’t convened to save the government money. And Ganz says she went into the deliberations not thinking she would come out the way she did. But she was persuaded by the evidence. Especially by a new, still-unpublished study of 700 men who got either surgery for prostate cancer or something called watchful waiting. Dr. Timothy Wilt of the University of Minnesota led that study.

DR. TIMOTHY WILT: Our study, along with others, have demonstrated a very low risk of dying from prostate cancer over 15 years. And that surgery does not reduce that risk.

KNOX: Wilt says most men diagnosed with prostate cancer are in their 60s and beyond. So the study shows surgery isn’t likely to extend their lives.

WILT: If there was any benefit, it would have to be exceedingly long distance in the future. Yet men still would have to endure the consequences of the harms associated with treatment.

KNOX: Those harms include sexual problems and difficulty controlling urinary and bowel function. He agrees that low-risk prostate tumors should be called something other than cancer. Idle tumors, perhaps.

WILT: The fact of the matter is, is that when somebody gets labeled with a diagnosis of cancer, there are all sorts of terms that are used for that – fight the battle, win the war. Military terms.

KNOX: That kind of thinking may be obsolete. But Albany urologist Barry Kogan says the argument shifts a little bit for men his age – under 60. They have a longer life expectancy.

DR. BARRY KOGAN: For me it would probably be a coin toss.

KNOX: He agrees treatment may not be necessary for older men with low-risk tumors, but when he was diagnosed a couple of years ago with a slightly higher-risk prostate cancer…

KOGAN: I did have radical surgery to treat it.

KNOX: The point is, not all prostate cancer is the same and it shouldn’t be treated that way.

Richard Knox, NPR News.