
Oncology NEWS International
- Oncology NEWS International Vol 8 No 3
- Volume 8
- Issue 3
All LHRH Agonists Equal for Advanced Prostate Cancer
ROCKVILLE, Md-Patients with advanced prostate cancer treated with luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) agonists have essentially the same survival rate and experience roughly the same side effects regardless of which drug they receive, according to a technology assessment report prepared for the Department of Health and Human Services’ Agency for Health Care Policy and Research (AHCPR).
ROCKVILLE, MdPatients with advanced prostate cancer treated with luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) agonists have essentially the same survival rate and experience roughly the same side effects regardless of which drug they receive, according to a technology assessment report prepared for the Department of Health and Human Services Agency for Health Care Policy and Research (AHCPR).
The report noted that there are substantial differences in costs among the available LHRH agonists.
The report found that combined androgen blockade appears to add little clinical benefit: It only marginally increases survival and causes more severe side effects. Moreover, the report said, there is no evidence to support the idea that certain patients with a good prognosis may benefit from the aggressive treatment.
The study reported insufficient evidence to determine whether starting testosterone suppression as soon as advanced prostate cancer is detected increases a mans chances of survival. AHCPR, however, noted that waiting until symptoms develop may spare patients years of living with serious treatment side effects, including impotence.
This report provides the first comprehensive analysis of all the available evidence on first-line treatment of this disease, said AHCPR administrator John M. Eisenberg, MD. It will help clarify the difficult choices that face men with advanced prostate cancer, their families, and their physicians.
The report was prepared by the Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association Technology Evaluation Center, one of the AHCPR-funded Evidence-Based Practice Centers.
Articles in this issue
over 26 years ago
Strong Upsurge in HIV and Tuberculosis Predictedover 26 years ago
NCAB Urges Repeal of Law Requiring Research Data Disclosureover 26 years ago
Response to Ontak Leads to Improved QOL in CTCLover 26 years ago
Medicare Will Phase in Risk-Adjusted HMO Payments Over 5-Year Periodover 26 years ago
Patients Need to Understand Cancer Testing Limitationsover 26 years ago
Assessing the Value of the Pain Intensity Assessment Toolsover 26 years ago
More Than 500 Clinical Practice Guidelines Now Available On-lineover 26 years ago
Inefficient Burning of Fossil Fuels Puts Children at Riskover 26 years ago
IOM Urges Replacing Race With Ethnicity in Cancer StudiesNewsletter
Stay up to date on recent advances in the multidisciplinary approach to cancer.


















































































