Department of Urology, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee, USA.
Department of Urology, UT Southwestern, Dallas, Texas, USA.
Prostate. 2021 Sep;81(13):944-955. doi: 10.1002/pros.24190. Epub 2021 Jul 20.
Little is known about how benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) develops and why patients respond differently to medical therapy designed to reduce lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS). The Medical Therapy of Prostatic Symptoms (MTOPS) trial randomized men with symptoms of BPH and followed response to medical therapy for up to 6 years. Treatment with a 5α-reductase inhibitor (5ARI) or an alpha-adrenergic receptor antagonist (α-blocker) reduced the risk of clinical progression, while men treated with combination therapy showed a 66% decrease in risk of progressive disease. However, medical therapies for BPH/LUTS are not effective in many patients. The reasons for nonresponse or loss of therapeutic response in the remaining patients over time are unknown. A better understanding of why patients fail to respond to medical therapy may have a major impact on developing new approaches for the medical treatment of BPH/LUTS. Prostaglandins (PG) act on G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs), where PGE and PGF elicit smooth muscle contraction. Therefore, we measured PG levels in the prostate tissue of BPH/LUTS patients to assess the possibility that this signaling pathway might explain the failure of medical therapy in BPH/LUTS patients.
Surgical BPH (S-BPH) was defined as benign prostatic tissue collected from the transition zone (TZ) of patients who failed medical therapy and underwent surgical intervention to relieve LUTS. Control tissue was termed Incidental BPH (I-BPH). I-BPH was TZ obtained from men undergoing radical prostatectomy for low-volume, low-grade prostatic adenocarcinoma (PCa, Gleason score ≤ 7) confined to the peripheral zone. All TZ tissue was confirmed to be cancer-free. S-BPH patients divided into four subgroups: patients on α-blockers alone, 5ARI alone, combination therapy (α-blockers plus 5ARI), or no medical therapy (none) before surgical resection. I-BPH tissue was subgrouped by prior therapy (either on α-blockers or without prior medical therapy before prostatectomy). We measured prostatic tissue levels of prostaglandins (PGF , PGI , PGE , PGD , and TxA ), quantitative polymerase chain reaction levels of mRNAs encoding enzymes within the PG synthesis pathway, cellular distribution of COX1 (PTGS1) and COX2 (PTGS2), and tested the ability of PGs to contract bladder smooth muscle in an in vitro assay.
All PGs were significantly elevated in TZ tissues from S-BPH patients (n = 36) compared to I-BPH patients (n = 15), regardless of the treatment subgroups. In S-BPH versus I-BPH, mRNA for PG synthetic enzymes COX1 and COX2 were significantly elevated. In addition, mRNA for enzymes that convert the precursor PGH to metabolite PGs were variable: PTGIS (which generates PGI ) and PTGDS (PGD ) were significantly elevated; nonsignificant increases were observed for PTGES (PGE ), AKR1C3 (PGF ), and TBxAS1 (TxA ). Within the I-BPH group, men responding to α-blockers for symptoms of BPH but requiring prostatectomy for PCa did not show elevated levels of COX1, COX2, or PGs. By immunohistochemistry, COX1 was predominantly observed in the prostatic stroma while COX2 was present in scattered luminal cells of isolated prostatic glands in S-BPH. PGE and PGF induced contraction of bladder smooth muscle in an in vitro assay. Furthermore, using the smooth muscle assay, we demonstrated that α-blockers that inhibit alpha-adrenergic receptors do not appear to inhibit PG stimulation of GPCRs in bladder muscle. Only patients who required surgery to relieve BPH/LUTS symptoms showed significantly increased tissue levels of PGs and the PG synthetic enzymes.
Treatment of BPH/LUTS by inhibition of alpha-adrenergic receptors with pharmaceutical α-blockers or inhibiting androgenesis with 5ARI may fail because of elevated paracrine signaling by prostatic PGs that can cause smooth muscle contraction. In contrast to patients who fail medical therapy for BPH/LUTS, control I-BPH patients do not show the same evidence of elevated PG pathway signaling. Elevation of the PG pathway may explain, in part, why the risk of clinical progression in the MTOPS study was only reduced by 34% with α-blocker treatment.
关于良性前列腺增生(BPH)的发展机制以及为什么患者对旨在减轻下尿路症状(LUTS)的医学治疗反应不同,我们知之甚少。前列腺症状的医学治疗(MTOPS)试验将有 BPH 症状的男性随机分组,并对其接受医学治疗后长达 6 年的反应进行了随访。5α-还原酶抑制剂(5ARI)或α-肾上腺素能受体拮抗剂(α-阻滞剂)治疗可降低临床进展的风险,而接受联合治疗的男性患进展性疾病的风险降低了 66%。然而,BPH/LUTS 的医学治疗在许多患者中并不有效。随着时间的推移,对于为什么其余患者会出现治疗无应答或应答丧失,其原因尚不清楚。如果能够更好地了解为什么患者对医学治疗无反应,可能会对开发治疗 BPH/LUTS 的新方法产生重大影响。前列腺素(PG)作用于 G 蛋白偶联受体(GPCR),其中 PGE 和 PGF 可引起平滑肌收缩。因此,我们测量了 BPH/LUTS 患者前列腺组织中的 PG 水平,以评估该信号通路可能解释 BPH/LUTS 患者医学治疗失败的可能性。
手术良性前列腺增生(S-BPH)定义为从接受医学治疗失败并接受手术缓解 LUTS 的患者的移行区(TZ)收集的良性前列腺组织。对照组织称为偶然良性前列腺增生(I-BPH)。I-BPH 是从因低体积、低分级前列腺腺癌(PCa,Gleason 评分≤7)局限于外周区而行根治性前列腺切除术的男性的 TZ 获得的。所有 TZ 组织均确认无癌症。S-BPH 患者分为四个亚组:单独使用α-阻滞剂、单独使用 5ARI、联合治疗(α-阻滞剂加 5ARI)或手术切除前无任何医学治疗(无)的患者。I-BPH 组织按先前的治疗方法(α-阻滞剂或前列腺切除术之前无任何医学治疗)进行亚组划分。我们测量了前列腺组织中 PG(PGF、PGI、PGE、PGD 和 TxA)的水平、PG 合成途径中编码酶的 mRNA 水平、COX1(PTGS1)和 COX2(PTGS2)的细胞分布,并在体外试验中测试了 PG 收缩膀胱平滑肌的能力。
与 I-BPH 患者(n=15)相比,无论治疗亚组如何,S-BPH 患者(n=36)的 TZ 组织中所有 PG 均显著升高。与 I-BPH 相比,S-BPH 中 PG 合成酶 COX1 和 COX2 的 mRNA 显著升高。此外,转化前体 PGH 生成 PG 的酶的 mRNA 水平各不相同:PTGIS(生成 PGI)和 PTGDS(PGD)显著升高;PTGES(PGE)、AKR1C3(PGF)和 TBxAS1(TxA)观察到非显著增加。在 I-BPH 组中,对 BPH 症状有反应但因 PCa 需要前列腺切除术的男性,COX1、COX2 或 PG 水平没有升高。通过免疫组织化学染色,COX1 主要存在于前列腺基质中,而 COX2 存在于分离的前列腺腺泡的散在腔细胞中。在体外试验中,PGE 和 PGF 可诱导膀胱平滑肌收缩。此外,我们利用平滑肌检测法证明,抑制α-肾上腺素能受体的α阻滞剂似乎不能抑制 PG 对膀胱肌肉中 GPCRs 的刺激。只有需要手术缓解 BPH/LUTS 症状的患者表现出明显升高的 PG 水平和 PG 合成酶。
通过使用抑制前列腺 PG 旁分泌信号的药物来抑制前列腺增生的药物治疗(如抑制α-肾上腺素能受体的α阻滞剂或抑制雄激素生成的 5ARI)可能会失败,因为 PG 可引起平滑肌收缩。与 BPH/LUTS 治疗失败的患者不同,对照 I-BPH 患者没有表现出同样的证据表明 PG 途径信号增强。PG 途径的升高可能部分解释了 MTOPS 研究中仅用α-阻滞剂治疗降低临床进展风险的幅度为 34%的原因。