Kunath Frank, Grobe Henrik R, Rücker Gerta, Motschall Edith, Antes Gerd, Dahm Philipp, Wullich Bernd, Meerpohl Joerg J
Department of Urology, University of Erlangen, Krankenhausstrasse 12, Erlangen, Germany, 91054.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2014 Jun 30;2014(6):CD009266. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD009266.pub2.
Non-steroidal antiandrogens and castration are the main therapy options for advanced stages of prostate cancer. However, debate regarding the value of these treatment options continues.
To assess the effects of non-steroidal antiandrogen monotherapy compared with luteinising hormone-releasing hormone agonists or surgical castration monotherapy for treating advanced stages of prostate cancer.
We searched the Cochrane Prostatic Diseases and Urologic Cancers Group Specialized Register (PROSTATE), the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL), MEDLINE, EMBASE, Web of Science with Conference Proceedings, three trial registries and abstracts from three major conferences to 23 December 2013, together with reference lists, and contacted selected experts in the field and manufacturers.
We included randomised controlled trials comparing non-steroidal antiandrogen monotherapy with medical or surgical castration monotherapy for men in advanced stages of prostate cancer.
One review author screened all titles and abstracts; only citations that were clearly irrelevant were excluded at this stage. Then, two review authors independently examined full-text reports, identified relevant studies, assessed the eligibility of studies for inclusion, assessed trial quality and extracted data. We contacted the study authors to request additional information. We used Review Manager 5 for data synthesis and used the fixed-effect model for heterogeneity less than 50%; we used the random-effects model for substantial or considerable heterogeneity.
Eleven studies involving 3060 randomly assigned participants were included in this review. The quality of evidence is hampered by risk of bias. Use of non-steroidal antiandrogens decreased overall survival (hazard ratio (HR) 1.24, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.05 to 1.48, six studies, 2712 participants) and increased clinical progression (one year: risk ratio (RR) 1.25, 95% CI 1.08 to 1.45, five studies, 2067 participants; 70 weeks: RR 1.26, 95% CI 1.08 to 1.45, six studies, 2373 participants; two years: RR 1.14, 95% CI 1.04 to 1.25, three studies, 1336 participants), as well as treatment failure (one year: RR 1.19, 95% CI 1.02 to 1.38, four studies, 1539 participants; 70 weeks: RR 1.27, 95% CI 1.05 to 1.52, five studies, 1845 participants; two years: RR 1.14, 95% CI 1.05 to 1.24, two studies, 808 participants), compared with medical or surgical castration. The quality of evidence for overall survival, clinical progression and treatment failure was rated as moderate according to GRADE. Predefined subgroup analyses showed that use of non-steroidal antiandrogens, compared with castration, was less favourable for overall survival, clinical progression (at one year, 70 weeks, two years) and treatment failure (at one year, 70 weeks, two years) in men with metastatic disease. Use of non-steroidal antiandrogens also increased the risk for treatment discontinuation due to adverse events (RR 1.82, 95% CI 1.13 to 2.94, eight studies, 1559 participants), including events such as breast pain (RR 22.97, 95% CI 14.79 to 35.67, eight studies, 2670 participants), gynaecomastia (RR 8.43, 95% CI 3.19 to 22.28, nine studies, 2774 participants) and asthenia (RR 1.77, 95% CI 1.36 to 2.31, five studies, 2073 participants). The risk of other adverse events, such as hot flashes (RR 0.23, 95% CI 0.19 to 0.27, nine studies, 2774 participants), haemorrhage (RR 0.07, 95% CI 0.01 to 0.54, two studies, 546 participants), nocturia (RR 0.38, 95% CI 0.20 to 0.69, one study, 480 participants), fatigue (RR 0.52, 95% CI 0.31 to 0.88, one study, 51 participants), loss of sexual interest (RR 0.50, 95% CI 0.30 to 0.83, one study, 51 participants) and urinary frequency (RR 0.22, 95% CI 0.11 to 0.47, one study, 480 participants) was decreased when non-steroidal antiandrogens were used. The quality of evidence for breast pain, gynaecomastia and hot flashes was rated as moderate according to GRADE. The effects of non-steroidal antiandrogens on cancer-specific survival and biochemical progression remained unclear.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Currently available evidence suggests that use of non-steroidal antiandrogen monotherapy compared with medical or surgical castration monotherapy for advanced prostate cancer is less effective in terms of overall survival, clinical progression, treatment failure and treatment discontinuation due to adverse events. Evidence quality was rated as moderate according to GRADE. Further research is likely to have an important impact on results for patients with advanced but non-metastatic prostate cancer treated with non-steroidal antiandrogen monotherapy. However, we believe that research is likely not necessary on non-steroidal antiandrogen monotherapy for men with metastatic prostate cancer. Only high-quality, randomised controlled trials with long-term follow-up should be conducted. If further research is planned to investigate biochemical progression, studies with standardised follow-up schedules using measurements of prostate-specific antigen based on current guidelines should be conducted.
非甾体类抗雄激素药物和去势治疗是晚期前列腺癌的主要治疗选择。然而,关于这些治疗选择的价值仍存在争议。
评估非甾体类抗雄激素单药治疗与促黄体生成素释放激素激动剂或手术去势单药治疗晚期前列腺癌的效果。
我们检索了Cochrane前列腺疾病与泌尿系统癌症专业注册库(PROSTATE)、Cochrane对照试验中心注册库(CENTRAL)、MEDLINE、EMBASE、包含会议论文的科学网、三个试验注册库以及截至2013年12月23日的三大会议的摘要,并查阅了参考文献列表,还联系了该领域的选定专家和制造商。
我们纳入了比较非甾体类抗雄激素单药治疗与药物或手术去势单药治疗晚期前列腺癌男性患者的随机对照试验。
一位综述作者筛选所有标题和摘要;在此阶段仅排除明显不相关的引用。然后,两位综述作者独立审查全文报告,识别相关研究,评估纳入研究的合格性,评估试验质量并提取数据。我们联系研究作者以获取更多信息。我们使用Review Manager 5进行数据合成,异质性小于50%时使用固定效应模型;异质性较大时使用随机效应模型。
本综述纳入了11项研究,共3060名随机分配的参与者。证据质量受到偏倚风险的影响。与药物或手术去势相比,使用非甾体类抗雄激素降低了总生存期(风险比(HR)1.24,95%置信区间(CI)1.05至1.48,6项研究,2712名参与者),增加了临床进展(1年:风险比(RR)1.25,95% CI 1.08至1.45,5项研究,2067名参与者;70周:RR 1.26,95% CI 1.08至1.45,6项研究,2373名参与者;2年:RR 1.14,95% CI 1.04至1.25,3项研究,1336名参与者),以及治疗失败(1年:RR 1.19,95% CI 1.02至1.38,4项研究,1539名参与者;70周:RR 1.27,95% CI 1.05至1.52,5项研究,1845名参与者;2年:RR 1.14,95% CI 1.05至1.24,2项研究,808名参与者)。根据GRADE评估,总生存期、临床进展和治疗失败的证据质量被评为中等。预定义的亚组分析表明,与去势相比,在转移性疾病男性中使用非甾体类抗雄激素在总生存期、临床进展(1年、70周、2年)和治疗失败(1年、70周、2年)方面更不理想。使用非甾体类抗雄激素还增加了因不良事件导致治疗中断的风险(RR 1.82,95% CI 1.13至2.94,8项研究,1559名参与者),包括乳房疼痛(RR 22.97,95% CI 14.79至35.67,8项研究,2670名参与者)、男性乳房发育(RR 8.43,95% CI 3.19至22.28,9项研究,2774名参与者)和乏力(RR 1.77,95% CI 1.36至2.31,5项研究,2073名参与者)。使用非甾体类抗雄激素时,其他不良事件的风险降低,如潮热(RR 0.23,95% CI 0.19至0.27,9项研究,2774名参与者)、出血(RR 0.07,95% CI 0.01至0.54,2项研究,546名参与者)、夜尿症(RR 0.38,95% CI 0.20至0.69,1项研究,480名参与者)、疲劳(RR 0.52,95% CI 0.31至0.88,1项研究,51名参与者)、性兴趣丧失(RR 0.50,95% CI 0.30至0.83,1项研究,51名参与者)和尿频(RR 0.22,95% CI 0.11至0.47,1项研究,480名参与者)。根据GRADE评估,乳房疼痛、男性乳房发育和潮热的证据质量被评为中等。非甾体类抗雄激素对癌症特异性生存期和生化进展的影响仍不清楚。
现有证据表明,与药物或手术去势单药治疗相比,非甾体类抗雄激素单药治疗晚期前列腺癌在总生存期、临床进展、治疗失败和因不良事件导致的治疗中断方面效果较差。根据GRADE评估,证据质量为中等。进一步的研究可能会对接受非甾体类抗雄激素单药治疗的晚期但非转移性前列腺癌患者的结果产生重要影响。然而,我们认为对于转移性前列腺癌男性患者的非甾体类抗雄激素单药治疗可能无需进行研究。仅应开展高质量、长期随访的随机对照试验。如果计划进一步研究生化进展,应开展按照当前指南使用前列腺特异性抗原测量进行标准化随访方案的研究。