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Prostate
cancer
hormone
drugs
risky
for some
men
By CARLA
K.
JOHNSON
AP
Medical
Writer
A new
study
links
hormone
therapy
for
prostate
cancer
with a
higher
risk of
death in
older
men
who've
had
serious
heart
problems.
Hormone
therapy
suppresses
the
amount
of
testosterone
produced,
in turn
causing
prostate
tumors
to
shrink
or grow
more
slowly.
The
treatment,
involving
injections
in a
doctor's
office,
can help
men with
more
advanced
disease
when
used
with
surgery
or
radiation.
But the
side
effects
are
troubling:
impotence,
bone
loss,
hot
flashes,
memory
problems,
fatigue
and an
increased
risk for
diabetes
and
heart
disease.
For the
new
study,
appearing
in
Wednesday's
Journal
of the
American
Medical
Association,
researchers
followed
more
than
5,000
men with
prostate
cancer
that
hadn't
spread.
The men,
most in
their
60s and
70s,
were
followed
for an
average
of five
years.
All the
patients
had
brachytherapy,
a type
of
radiation
treatment,
at one
Illinois
treatment
center.
Thirty
percent
of them
also
took
hormone
therapy
for an
average
of four
months.
Five
percent
of the
men in
the
study
had a
history
of heart
failure
or heart
attack
and 43
of those
men
died.
Among
those
with
heart
problems,
the
hormone
treatment
was
linked
with a
96
percent
higher
risk of
death
after
adjusting
for
other
risk
factors.
In raw
numbers,
of the
95 men
on
hormone
therapy
who also
had a
history
of
serious
heart
problems,
25 died;
and of
the 161
men not
on
hormone
therapy
who also
had a
history
of heart
problems,
18 died.
"Our
results
should
heighten
awareness
about
the
potential
for harm
with
hormonal
therapy
for men
with
pre-existing
heart
disease,"
said
lead
author
Dr.
Akash
Nanda of
the
Harvard
Radiation
Oncology
Program
in
Boston.
The
study
was
observational,
meaning
the men
chose
their
treatment
with
their
doctors,
rather
than
being
randomly
assigned
to get
one
treatment
or
another.
That's a
less
rigorous
approach
and
means
the
deaths
could
have
been
caused
by
factors
other
than the
hormone
therapy.
The
small
number
of
deaths
also
calls
for
additional
research.
But the
findings
line up
with
prior
studies
that
have
found
that
sicker
men
don't
benefit
from
hormone
therapy
when
it's
added to
radiation.
And
hormone
therapy
used
alone in
older
men has
been
linked
to a
slightly
heightened
risk of
death.
"For
those
who've
been
following
the
field,
this is
not
surprising
at all,"
said Dr.
Stephen
Freedland,
a Duke
University
prostate
cancer
specialist,
who
wasn't
involved
in the
study.
Freedland
said
that
although
some
patients
benefit
from
hormone
therapy,
it's
dangerous
in the
wrong
patients.
The
drugs
can
increase
insulin
resistance
and
raise
cholesterol.
They
increase
fat,
too.
He
likened
it to
the
opposite
of
performance-enhancing
drugs
some
athletes
have
taken:
"You
take
away the
muscles
and give
him
fat."
In some
men, the
hormone-blocking
treatment,
sometimes
called
chemical
castration,
is given
as a
first
step
before
brachytherapy
to
reduce
the size
of the
prostate.
In the
study,
the
drugs
given
were
leuprolide
or
goserelin
injections
combined
with
oral
bicalutamide
or
flutamide.
The
treatment
costs
about
$1,400 a
month.
The
study
was
funded
by
Brigham
and
Women's
Hospital
and the
Dana-Farber
Cancer
Institute
in
Boston.
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