Urologic Oncology: Seminars and Original Investigations
Volume 27, Issue 3 , Pages 251-257, May 2009

Castration-resistant prostate cancer: Targeting androgen metabolic pathways in recurrent disease

☆☆Presented as part of the SUO/SBUR 2007 Annual Meeting, Anaheim, CA, May 2007. Program Director: Christopher Evans, M.D.

Divisions of Human Biology and Clinical Research, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, WA 98109, USA

Received 8 February 2009; received in revised form 10 March 2009; accepted 10 March 2009.

Abstract 

Emerging evidence suggests that despite testicular androgen ablation, residual androgens, likely of adrenal—though potentially of prostatic—origin, play a critical role in the progression of prostate cancer to recurrent “castration-resistant” disease. Thus, a reassessment of the concept of total androgen deprivation is warranted. Current treatment strategies may not only lack optimal efficacy, but may actually contribute to the selection of neoplastic clones adapted to exist and proliferate in a low (but not zero) androgen environment. Moreover, the adequacy of androgen receptor (AR) pathway inhibition cannot be surmised from serum or plasma androgen levels, but must be ascertained at the tissue and molecular level prior to drawing conclusions regarding clinical efficacy or failure. Recent studies by our group and others indicate that prostate cancers undergo an adaptive response to castration that is associated with the up-regulation of transcripts encoding enzymes involved in the biosynthesis of androgens. Targeting these metabolic enzymes either individually or using combinations of agents to inhibit testicular, adrenal, and intracrine sources may provide enhanced clinical responses in the setting of both localized and metastatic disease.

Keywords: Prostate cancer, Hormone therapy, Castration resistant, Metastatic, Androgen metabolism, Intracrinology, Steroidogenesis

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 This work was supported by a Career Development Award from the Prostate Cancer Foundation, a Damon Runyon-Genentech Clinical Investigator Award, and NIH grant 5K23 CA122820-02 (all to E.A.M.); and the NIH/NCI Pacific Northwest Prostate Cancer SPORE grant P50CA97186 (to P.S.N.).

PII: S1078-1439(09)00092-1

doi:10.1016/j.urolonc.2009.03.016

Urologic Oncology: Seminars and Original Investigations
Volume 27, Issue 3 , Pages 251-257, May 2009