Horti J, Figg W D, Weinberger B, Kohler D, Sartor O
Medicine Branch, Division of Clinical Sciences, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA.
Oncol Rep. 1998 Jul-Aug;5(4):893-6. doi: 10.3892/or.5.4.893.
Prolactin is an important physiological regulator of prostate development and growth in preclinical models. In prostate cancer there is strong evidence that prolactin exerts a trophic effect independent of testosterone. In addition, patients with prostate cancer that have an elevated prolactin level correlated with a poorer prognosis. Based on these data, we evaluated the clinical effect of prolactin suppression using bromocriptine in patients with androgen-independent prostate cancer. We conducted an open-label phase II trial of bromocriptine in patients with progressive metastatic prostate cancer. Basal and thyrotropin releasing hormone (TRH)-stimulated prolactin levels were utilized as biological endpoints for determining the dose of bromocriptine. All patients continued to receive complete androgen blockade. Thirteen patients were enrolled (median age 69.5 years). There were no complete or partial responses associated with bromocriptine in 11 of the evaluable patients. The mean duration of bromocriptine treatment was 8.2 weeks (2-14 weeks). One patient had a clinically insignificant decrease in prostate-specific antigen (PSA) and another patient had a 19.9% decrease in PSA with progression of a soft tissue mass. The vast majority of patients (10 of 11) had suppression of prolactin with a bromocriptine dose of 2.5 mg three times a day. One patient required a dose adjustment due to inadequate suppression, with a final maintenance dose of bromocriptine 12.5 mg per day resulting in complete suppression. No serious treatment-related toxicities were observed. The most common complications noted were nausea, headaches, dizziness, and fatigue. Our data showed that 2.5 mg three times per day of bromocriptine suppressed prolactin in 90% of the patients. Furthermore, this dose appears to be well tolerated.
在临床前模型中,催乳素是前列腺发育和生长的重要生理调节因子。在前列腺癌中,有充分证据表明催乳素发挥着独立于睾酮的营养作用。此外,前列腺癌患者中催乳素水平升高与预后较差相关。基于这些数据,我们评估了使用溴隐亭抑制催乳素对雄激素非依赖性前列腺癌患者的临床效果。我们对进展性转移性前列腺癌患者进行了一项溴隐亭开放标签的II期试验。基础和促甲状腺激素释放激素(TRH)刺激的催乳素水平被用作确定溴隐亭剂量的生物学终点。所有患者继续接受完全雄激素阻断治疗。招募了13名患者(中位年龄69.5岁)。在11名可评估患者中,没有与溴隐亭相关的完全或部分缓解。溴隐亭治疗的平均持续时间为8.2周(2 - 14周)。一名患者前列腺特异性抗原(PSA)有临床意义不显著的下降,另一名患者PSA下降了19.9%,同时软组织肿块进展。绝大多数患者(11名中的10名)使用每日三次2.5毫克的溴隐亭剂量可使催乳素得到抑制。一名患者因抑制不足需要调整剂量,最终溴隐亭维持剂量为每日12.5毫克,实现了完全抑制。未观察到严重的治疗相关毒性。最常见的并发症是恶心、头痛、头晕和疲劳。我们的数据显示,每日三次2.5毫克的溴隐亭可使90%的患者催乳素得到抑制。此外,该剂量似乎耐受性良好。