Raadpleeg ook de lijst van niet-toxische ondersteuning bij prostaatkanker van arts-bioloog drs. Engelbert Valstar.

En als donateur kunt u ook korting krijgen bij verschillende bedrijven, waaronder bij Medpro voor o.a. prostasol  een veelgebruikt natuurlijk middel bij prostaatkanker als alternatief voor hormoontherapie.


8 augustus 2022: Bron: JAMA Oncol. Published online June 16, 2022

Behandeling met enzalutamide (Xtandi) verminderde het risico op progressie van prostaatkanker significant met 46,0% bij prostaatkankerpatiënten die gezien hun Gleasonscore en PSA waarden normaal gesproken in aanmerking zouden komen voor een wait-and-see beleid, ook wel actieve surveillance genoemd. 

Dat blijkt uit de ENACT studie, een gerandomiseerde fase II, open-label studie. In deze studie werden 227 patiënten met gelokaliseerde prostaatkanker met een laag of gemiddeld risico opgenomen onder actieve surveillance. Alle patiënten werden 1:1 gerandomiseerd ingedeeld om ofwel enzalutamide als monotherapie te krijgen gedurende 1 jaar of continue actieve controle te ondergaan door regelmatige PSA metingen.

Vergeleken met actieve surveillance was de kans op een negatief biopsieresultaat 3,5 keer hoger voor de patiënten uit de enzalutamidegroep; er was een significante afname van het percentage kankerpositieve cellen en de kans op een tweede stijging van de PSA-bloedwaarden na 1 jaar met behandeling met enzalutamide was dus ook minder; Op 2-jaars  meting werd er geen statistisch significant verschil meer waargenomen.

Als conclusie schrijven de onderzoekers: behandeling met enzalutamide verminderde het risico op progressie van prostaatkanker significant met 46,0%. De meest gemelde bijwerking was vermoeidheid, waargenomen bij 55,4% van de patiënten, gevolgd door gynaecomastie = borstvergrotingen bij 36,6% van de patiënten.

Het volledige studierapport is gratis in te zien of te downloaden. Klik daarvoor op de titel van het abstract:

visual abstract icon 
Visual
Abstract
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Editorial
Comment
Enzalutamide Monotherapy vs Active Surveillance in Patients With Low-Risk or Intermediate-Risk Localized Prostate Cancer
Key Points

Question  How does the efficacy and safety of treatment with enzalutamide monotherapy compare with active surveillance in patients with clinically localized low-risk or intermediate-risk prostate cancer?

Findings  In this phase 2, open-label, randomized clinical trial of 227 patients with low-risk or intermediate-risk localized prostate cancer, treatment with enzalutamide was well tolerated. Compared with active surveillance alone, enzalutamide significantly reduced the risk of pathological or therapeutic prostate cancer progression by 46%.

Meaning  The trial results suggest that enzalutamide monotherapy may offer a potential treatment option for this patient population.

Abstract

Importance  There are few published studies prospectively assessing pharmacological interventions that may delay prostate cancer progression in patients undergoing active surveillance (AS).

Objective  To compare the efficacy and safety of enzalutamide monotherapy plus AS vs AS alone in patients with low-risk or intermediate-risk prostate cancer.

Design, Setting, and Participants  The ENACT study was a phase 2, open-label, randomized clinical trial conducted from June 2016 to August 2020 at 66 US and Canadian sites. Eligible patients were 18 years or older, had received a diagnosis of histologically proven low-risk or intermediate-risk localized prostate cancer within 6 months of screening, and were undergoing AS. Patients were monitored during 1 year of treatment and up to 2 years of follow-up. Data analysis was conducted in February 2021.

Interventions  Randomized 1:1 to enzalutamide, 160 mg, monotherapy for 1 year or continued AS, as stratified by cancer risk and follow-up biopsy type.

Main Outcomes and Measures  The primary end point was time to pathological or therapeutic prostate cancer progression (pathological, ≥1 increase in primary or secondary Gleason pattern or ≥15% increased cancer-positive cores; therapeutic, earliest occurrence of primary therapy for prostate cancer). Secondary end points included incidence of a negative biopsy result, percentage of cancer-positive cores, and incidence of a secondary rise in serum prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels at 1 and 2 years, as well as time to PSA progression. Adverse events were monitored to assess safety.

Results  A total of 114 patients were randomized to treatment with enzalutamide plus AS and 113 to AS alone; baseline characteristics were similar between treatment arms (mean age, 66.1 [7.8] years; 1 Asian individual [0.4%], 21 Black or African American individuals [9.3%], 1 Hispanic individual [0.4%], and 204 White individuals [89.9%]). Enzalutamide significantly reduced the risk of prostate cancer progression by 46% vs AS (hazard ratio, 0.54; 95% CI, 0.33-0.89; P = .02). Compared with AS, odds of a negative biopsy result were 3.5 times higher; there was a significant reduction in the percentage of cancer-positive cores and the odds of a secondary rise in serum PSA levels at 1 year with treatment with enzalutamide; no significant difference was observed at 2 years. Treatment with enzalutamide also significantly delayed PSA progression by 6 months vs AS (hazard ratio, 0.71; 95% CI, 0.53-0.97; P = .03). The most commonly reported adverse events during enzalutamide treatment were fatigue (62 [55.4%]) and gynecomastia (41 [36.6%]). Three patients in the enzalutamide arm died; none were receiving the study drug at the time of death. No deaths were considered treatment-related.

Conclusions and Relevance  The results of this randomized clinical trial suggest that enzalutamide monotherapy was well-tolerated and demonstrated a significant treatment response in patients with low-risk or intermediate-risk localized prostate cancer. Enzalutamide may provide an alternative treatment option for patients undergoing AS.

Trial Registration  ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02799745

References
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