1. Finasteride and high-grade prostate cancer in The Prostate Cancer Prevention Trial
- Author
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Lucia, M. Scott, Epstein, Jonathan I., Goodman, Phyllis J., Darke, Amy K., Reuter, Victor E., Civantos, Francisco, Tangen, Catherine M., Parnes, Howard L., Lippman, Scott M., La Rosa, Francisco G., Kattan, Michael W., Crawford, E. David, Ford, Leslie G., Coltman, Charles A., Jr, and Thompson, lan M.
- Subjects
Prostate cancer -- Drug therapy ,Prostate cancer -- Prevention ,Finasteride -- Dosage and administration ,Finasteride -- Physiological aspects ,Cancer -- Prevention ,Cancer -- Research ,Health - Abstract
Background The Prostate Cancer Prevention Trial (PCPT) reported a decreased incidence of prostate cancer overall but an increase in the incidence of high-grade prostate cancer with finasteride compared with placebo. We assessed whether the increased high-grade prostate cancer associated with finasteride in the PCPT was due to finasteride's potential effects on tumor morphology or prostate size. Methods Prostate biopsies with Gleason score 8-10 (n = 90, finasteride; n = 52, placebo) were examined histologically for hormonal effects, and those with Gleason score 7-10 (n = 282, finasteride; n = 244, placebo) were examined for pathologic surrogates of disease extent. Prostate volumes were measured at biopsy. Samples from radical prostatectomies (n = 222, finasteride; n = 306, placebo) were examined for tumor grade and extent, and, where possible, grades at biopsy and prostatectomy were compared between the groups. Logistic regression was used to analyze differences between treatment groups with respect to pathologic criteria. All statistical tests were two-sided. Results Degenerative hormonal changes in high-grade biopsies were equivalent between the finasteride and placebo groups, but prostate volumes were lower in the finasteride group (median = 25.1 versus 34.4 [cm.sup.3], P Conclusions Effects of finasteride on prostate volume and selective inhibition of low-grade cancer, rather than effects on tumor morphology, may have contributed to the increase in high-grade cancers with finasteride in the PCPT. Although induction of high-grade cancer cannot be excluded, the results suggest that high-grade cancer was detected earlier and was less extensive in the finasteride group than in the placebo group.
- Published
- 2007