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Editor's Note Androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) is the basic treatment for advanced and metastatic prostate cancer, with progression-free survival (PFS) of 12-30 months in about 90% of patients
.
Compared with surgical castration, medical castration is easier for patients to accept, and the survival benefit after treatment is good, making it the first choice for clinical castration
.
Medical castration includes luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) agonists (LHRHa) and LHRH antagonists, with LHRHa being the most common treatment
.
LHRHa blocks testosterone (T) production by Leydig cells, but differences between different LHRHas affect the degree of inhibition of the pituitary-gonadal axis and the potency of castration
.
Therefore, a Korean retrospective study evaluated the efficacy of triptorelin, goserelin, and leuprolide in advanced/metastatic prostate cancer (change in testosterone level and change in chemical castration rate), providing clinical information for clinical use reference
.
Weighing the short while talking about the long: An in-depth look at the ketone-lowering effects of triptorelin, goserelin, and leuprolide: A retrospective analysis assessing changes in testosterone levels over 9 months of treatment.
125 patients with locally advanced or metastatic prostate cancer who received LHRHa during December 2015 were divided into triptorelin group (n=44, 11.
25mg), leuprolide group (n=22, 11.
25mg) and In the goserelin group (n=59, 11.
34 mg), which was administered once every 3 months, there was no significant difference in baseline characteristic levels among the three groups (P>0.
2)
.
55.
9% of patients in the goserelin group and 56.
8% in the triptorelin group received maximal androgen blockade (MAB, bicalutamide + LHRHa) compared to the proportion of patients in the leuprolide group who received MAB significantly lower (18.
2%)
.
Serum testosterone levels were measured before ADT treatment and at 3, 6, and 9 months after initiation of treatment, and serum testosterone levels of <50 ng/dL, <20 ng/dL, and <10 ng were assessed at 3, 6, and 9 months /dL of patients
.
Findings 1: The testosterone levels of the three drugs at 3, 6, and 9 months showed that the average testosterone level ± SD of the patients in the triptorelin group continued to decrease throughout the study period and maintained the lowest level, at 3 months.
Testosterone levels were 7.
0±7.
6 ng/dL, 5.
9±4.
3 ng/dL, and 5.
7±4.
2 ng/dL at 6 months, 6 months, and 9 months, respectively; the leuprolide group had similar changes in testosterone levels, 9.
7±9.
4 ng, respectively /dL, 8.
6±6.
6 ng/dL, and 8.
0±7.
9 ng/dL; but testosterone levels in the goserelin group were 11.
9±12.
1 ng/dL, 9.
9±6.
5 ng/dL, and 12.
7±13.
6 ng/dL, respectively, indicating that Testosterone concentrations decreased during 3-6 months, but increased during 6-9 months
.
There was a significant difference in mean testosterone concentrations between the triptorelin and goserelin groups over time (P<0.
001), but the leuprolide and goserelin groups (P=0.
087) and leuprolide There was no significant difference between the triptorelin group and the triptorelin group (P=0.
106)
.
Figure 1.
Subgroup analysis of overall population mean serum testosterone levels receiving LHRHa monotherapy results were similar to the overall population results
.
The results suggest that the mean serum testosterone level in the triptorelin group was the lowest (6.
1±5.
1 ng/dL, 6.
5±4.
6 ng/dL, 5.
1±3.
1 ng/dL at 3, 6, and 9 months, respectively), followed by leuprolide Relin group (9.
6±8.
2 ng/dL, 8.
7±6.
7 ng/dL and 6.
8±6.
0 ng/dL) and goserelin group (11.
5±8.
4 ng/dL, 12.
1±6.
2 ng/dL and 14.
1±15.
4 ng /dL)
.
The mean serum testosterone values in the triptorelin group and leuprolide group were significantly lower than those in the goserelin group (P<0.
001 and P=0.
020, respectively)
.
Figure 2 Results of the study on mean serum testosterone levels in subgroups 2: Percentages of patients with different testosterone cutoffs to castration levels When the testosterone cutoff was set at 20 ng/dL, more than 90% of the patients had T<20 ng/dL, of which All patients in the triptorelin monotherapy subgroup achieved T<20 ng/dL during treatment
.
When the testosterone cutoff was set at 10 ng/dL, there was a significant difference in the proportion of patients among the three groups: at 9 months of treatment, 93.
2% of the patients in the triptorelin group and 86.
4% of the patients in the leuprolide group reached castration level, but only 54.
2% of patients in the goserelin group reached the castration level (P < 0.
001)
.
In the monotherapy subgroup analysis, at 9 months of treatment, 89.
5%, 83.
3%, and 34.
6% of patients in the triptorelin, leuprolide, and goserelin groups reached the castration level, respectively ( P < 0.
001)
.
Table 1 Proportion of patients with castration levels at different testosterone thresholds At present, T < 50 ng/dL is still the standard for judging castration, but with the advancement of medical technology and research, T < 20 ng/dL has been proved to better prognosis for patients
.
This retrospective analysis showed us that triptorelin, leuprolide, and goserelin all reduced testosterone levels, with triptorelin reducing testosterone levels the least
.
In addition, the triptorelin group had the highest proportion of patients with T<10 ng/dL at 9 months of treatment, suggesting that triptorelin may be the optimal LHRHa, but further validation in large randomized controlled trials is needed
.
Triptorelin is available in 1-month and 3-month extended-release (SR) formulations.
Can both formulations achieve testosterone levels <20 ng/dL? Another retrospective analysis gave us the answer
.
Retrospective Exploration - Triptorelin 1-month and 3-month extended-release formulations reduced ketones to <20 ng/dL 920 evaluable patients with advanced prostate cancer received the SR formulation of triptorelin for 1, 3, and 6 months
.
The primary endpoint was testosterone levels measured by radioimmunoassay (RIA) or liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS)
.
Pooled data from all studies showed that the majority of patients achieved testosterone levels <20 ng/dL at 1, 3, 6, 9, and 12 months regardless of the SR formulation
.
With a testosterone cutoff value of 20 ng/dL, the success rate of castration at months 1, 3, 6, 9, and 12 was 79% (95% CI: 75.
9–81.
3%) and 92% (95%), respectively.
CI: 89.
7–93.
6%), 93% (95% CI: 90.
4–94.
4%), 90% (95% CI: 87.
2–92.
0%), and 91% (95% CI: 84.
6–95.
8%)
.
Figure 3.
Proportion of patients with T < 20 ng/dL after triptorelin treatment.
The editor's handbook is increasingly evidence that T < 20 ng/dL will bring greater benefit to patients
.
All three LHRHas currently meet this criterion, but these two retrospective analyses suggest that triptorelin is more ketogenic and maintains testosterone to lower levels, and triptorelin 1-month and 3-month SR The preparations can be realized, which can be used as a reference for clinical practice
.
References: 1.
Shim M, Bang WJ, Oh CY, Lee YS, Cho JS.
Effectiveness of three different luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone agonists in the chemical castration of patients with prostate cancer: Goserelin versus triptorelin versus leuprolide.
Investig Clin Urol.
2019 Jul;60(4):244-250.
doi: 10.
4111/icu.
2019.
60.
4.
244.
Epub 2019 May 21.
2.
Breul J, Lundström E, Purcea D, et al.
Efficacy of Testosterone Suppression with Sustained-Release Triptorelin in Advanced Prostate Cancer.
Adv Ther.
2017;34(2):513-523.
Approval number: DIP-CN-008407 Valid until 22/4/2024 Editor: Bing Xin Reviewer: Bing Xin Execution: LR