
So, it’s been awhile, but that’s because the situation has been pretty stable, which is good, all things considered.
That said, I just returned from receiving another delightful dose of Firmagon, thick, cloudy…stuff…that’s injected into the belly. The nurse also agreed to draw blood for unscheduled PSA and testosterone tests. We found out the hard way that waiting the typical three or six months for such tests is not a good idea in my case.
Meanwhile, news arrived today of another promising therapy for advanced metastatic prostate cancer. The trial was conducted on men with castration-resistant prostate cancer. As you might recall, this means the cancer has stopped responding to treatments like the one I received today.
You’ll note in the text below that this innovative therapy bought a median of four months of additional survival. Until recently, as an investor in biotech companies, I shrugged at something like that. Four months. Big deal.
But, obviously, I’m in a different situation now. And someone on a prostate cancer message board wisely noted that four additional months of life – or three or two or even one – could allow someone to make it to a wedding, an anniversary, a child’s or grandchild’s birthday or graduation, any such treasured event that he otherwise would miss.
Here’s the story from the New York Times (thanks to retired Miami Herald publisher, nationally recognized childrens advocate and valued friend Dave Lawrence for making sure that I didn’t miss it):
Therapy for Aggressive Prostate Cancer Improves Survival
The experimental treatment relies on radioactive molecules that seek out tumor cells, a strategy that may be useful against other cancers.
By Roni Caryn Rabin
An experimental therapy has prolonged life in men with aggressive prostate cancer that has resisted other treatments, offering new hope to patients with advanced illness and opening the door to a promising new form of cancer therapy.
Among men who received the new therapy, there was a nearly 40 percent reduction in deaths over the course of the clinical trial, compared with similar patients who received only standard treatment, researchers reported on Wednesday.
Prostate cancer is the second-leading cause of cancer death among American men, after lung cancer; an estimated 34,130 men will die of prostate cancer this year. One in eight men will be diagnosed with the disease at some point in their lives. The risk increases with age, and the cancer is more common in Black men.
The new treatment relies on a radioactive molecule to target a protein found on the surface of prostate cancer cells. The study, which followed 831 patients with advanced disease in 10 countries for a median period of 20 months, was published in The New England Journal of Medicine.
“This is something new — you’re driving radiation right to the cancer itself,” said Karen Knudsen, president and chief executive of the American Cancer Society. “It’s a much more sophisticated strategy for targeting the tumor.”
“You’re not just destroying the cancer cells — you’re smart-bombing the place that the tumor has found for itself to live.”
There is no definitive cure for metastatic prostate cancer, and there is an urgent need for new therapies, Dr. Knudsen said. Most life-extending treatments rely on suppressing or blocking androgens, the male hormones that fuel prostate cancer.
“This opens the door to precision radiotherapy targeted at other molecules that are on the surface of other cancer cells,” said Dr. Philip Kantoff, chairman of medicine at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York.
The investigational treatment, called lutetium-177-PSMA-617, combines a compound that targets a protein on the surface of prostate cancer cells, called prostate-specific membrane antigen, or P.S.M.A., with a radioactive particle that attacks the cells.
The P.S.M.A. protein, which can be detected by imaging scans, is almost exclusively on prostate cancer cells, and so the treatment causes less damage to surrounding tissue, said Dr. Oliver Sartor, the trial’s co-principal investigator and medical director of Tulane Cancer Center in New Orleans.
Though the protein is not ubiquitous in prostate tumors, it is found in more than 80 percent of cases. Among patients screened for the trial, 87 percent were P.S.M.A.-positive. Only those men who were positive for the marker were included in the trial.
The study enrolled men with a form of metastatic prostate cancer called castration-resistant prostate cancer. All the patients had disease that progressed despite treatments with chemotherapy and hormonal therapy to suppress and block androgens.
Participants were randomly assigned to receive the experimental treatment, given every six weeks in up to six doses along with standard treatment, or to continue standard care alone, but without chemotherapy or other isotopes.
After a median follow-up period of 20.9 months, patients given the experimental treatment survived for a median of 15.3 months, compared with 11.3 months for those who received only standard care, a reduction of 38 percent.
Their tumors were more likely to shrink, their prostate-specific antigen levels were more likely to fall, and the risk of their cancer progressing was reduced by 60 percent.
Side effects — most commonly fatigue, dry mouth and nausea — were more prevalent among those receiving the compound than among those who did not, but did not appear to significantly affect quality of life, the researchers said.
The study had some limitations. It was a randomized trial, but because of the difficulties of running a double-blinded trial with a radioactive treatment, the trial was open-label: Both patients and physicians knew whether or not they were getting the treatment. That caused some problems early on, as patients who were disappointed by their assignment withdrew from the trial.
The investigational drug worked where other approaches had failed, Dr. Sartor emphasized. “These patients had received essentially all the available therapies,” he said. “This is the first drug targeted to the tumor that actually results in overall survival benefit among incredibly, heavily pretreated patients.”
Dr. Sartor was a co-principal investigator of the trial, along with Dr. Bernd Krause, of Rostock University Medical Center in Germany. The trial was sponsored by Endocyte Inc. and Advanced Accelerator Applications, which are Novartis companies; Dr. Sartor is a paid consultant to the company. The data were analyzed by the sponsor and provided confidentially to the authors.
Officials with Novartis said the company will apply to the Food and Drug Administration for approval of the new treatment later this year.
My sister did a self bone marrow treatment back in the 80’s. It was experimental then. She was number 13. They said it would give her a few more months. A few more months is a good thing. Keep researching!
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I wonder if that therapy could be used on patients who had their original prostate cancer treated with radiation but the cancer years later “returned?” I put quotes around the word returned because I suspect some of the original cancer eluded the radiation and survived. In any event, this seems to be terrific news.
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I’m quite certain that it can be used in that situation. This is not a front-line treatment. It is for recurrent cancer that has ceased responding to more conventional treatment.
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Every minute counts, pal. Glad to know you’re leaving no stone unturned. Thinking of you and yours every day.
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I was anxiously waiting a follow-up, and happy to hear of the possibilities. Sign up.
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Glad to hear the frontiers of medicine are moving along in promising ways. You know you have a support network second to none, pulling for you all the way. Thanks, as always, for sharing your experiences and knowledge in ways that will help others.
— Lee Ann
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