Bichat-Claude Bernard University Hospital, Department of Urology, University of Paris VII Paris, France.
Ther Adv Urol. 2011 Jun;3(3):127-40. doi: 10.1177/1756287211414457.
Androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) is the main treatment approach in advanced prostate cancer and in recent years has primarily involved the use of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) agonists. However, despite their efficacy, GnRH agonists have several drawbacks associated with their mode of action. These include an initial testosterone surge and testosterone microsurges on repeat administration. GnRH antagonists provide an alternative approach to ADT with a more direct mode of action that involves immediate blockade of GnRH receptors. Antagonists produce a more rapid suppression of testosterone (and prostate-specific antigen [PSA]) without a testosterone surge or microsurges and appear to offer an effective and well tolerated option for the hormonal treatment of prostate cancer. Comparisons with GnRH agonists have shown GnRH antagonists to be at least as effective in achieving and maintaining castrate testosterone levels in patients with prostate cancer. Furthermore, with antagonists, the lack of an initial testosterone surge (which may cause clinical flare) may allow more rapid relief of symptoms related to prostate cancer, avoid the need for concomitant antiandrogens to prevent clinical flare (so avoiding any antiandrogen-associated adverse events) and allow GnRH antagonist use in patients with high tumour burden and/or acute problems such as spinal cord compression. Although several antagonists have been investigated, only degarelix and abarelix are currently available for clinical use in prostate cancer. Currently, degarelix is the most extensively studied and widely available agent in this class. Degarelix is one of a newer generation of antagonists which, in a comprehensive and ongoing clinical development programme, has been shown to provide rapid, profound and sustained testosterone suppression without the systemic allergic reactions associated with earlier antagonists. This review examines the currently available data on GnRH antagonists in prostate cancer.
雄激素剥夺疗法(ADT)是晚期前列腺癌的主要治疗方法,近年来主要涉及使用促性腺激素释放激素(GnRH)激动剂。然而,尽管 GnRH 激动剂具有疗效,但它们的作用方式存在一些缺点。这些缺点包括初始睾酮激增和重复给药时的睾酮微激增。GnRH 拮抗剂为 ADT 提供了一种替代方法,其作用方式更直接,涉及 GnRH 受体的立即阻断。拮抗剂可更迅速地抑制睾酮(和前列腺特异性抗原[PSA]),而不会出现睾酮激增或微激增,并且似乎为前列腺癌的激素治疗提供了一种有效且耐受良好的选择。与 GnRH 激动剂的比较表明,GnRH 拮抗剂在实现和维持前列腺癌患者去势睾酮水平方面至少同样有效。此外,由于缺乏初始睾酮激增(这可能导致临床发作),拮抗剂可能允许更快缓解与前列腺癌相关的症状,避免需要同时使用抗雄激素来预防临床发作(从而避免任何与抗雄激素相关的不良事件),并允许在肿瘤负荷高和/或存在急性问题(如脊髓压迫)的患者中使用 GnRH 拮抗剂。尽管已经研究了几种拮抗剂,但目前只有 degarelix 和 abarelix 可用于前列腺癌的临床应用。目前,degarelix 是该类药物中研究最广泛、应用最广泛的药物。Degarelix 是新一代拮抗剂之一,在全面且持续的临床开发计划中,已被证明可迅速、深刻和持续地抑制睾酮,而不会产生与早期拮抗剂相关的全身性过敏反应。这篇综述检查了目前关于前列腺癌中 GnRH 拮抗剂的可用数据。