Department of Urology, Santo Spirito Hospital, Casale Monferrato, Alessandria, and Department of Biometry, Ibis Informatica s.r.l., Milan, Italy.
OBJECTIVE To determine if the testosterone level achieved with androgen-deprivation therapy (ADT) is directly related to survival and risk of death in men with metastatic prostate cancer, as agonistic analogues of luteinizing hormone-releasing hormones (LHRH) are indicated for palliative treatment of these patients, but there is no consensus about the utility of serum testosterone measurements during the follow-up, and their possible prognostic value. PATIENTS AND METHODS We retrospectively reviewed 129 consecutive patients with a histological diagnosis of metastatic bony-only prostate cancer and previously untreated with ADT. They were treated with 3 months of goserelin. Testosterone and prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels were measured in all patients every 3 months for the duration of the follow-up. The following variables were recorded: age, stage, Gleason score, basal PSA level, basal testosterone level, PSA nadir, time to PSA nadir, testosterone after 6 months, testosterone nadir and time to testosterone nadir. Data were analysed using Cox's proportional hazards models, with the primary endpoint being cancer-specific survival. RESULTS The mean (sd) basal PSA level was 185.8 (344.1) ng/mL, and the mean nadir PSA level 2.7 (8.6) ng/mL. The mean testosterone levels at baseline, 6 months and the nadir were 440 (200), 40 (40) and 21 (15) ng/dL. With a mean follow-up of 47.5 (29.7) months, 71 patients were dead (55%) and 78 were alive (45%) at the time of analysis. Statistical analysis using Cox's model showed that in these patients the risk of death was directly correlated not only to Gleason score (P <>
PMID: 19747358 [PubMed
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