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Safety and efficacy of abiraterone acetate in chemotherapy-naive patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer: an Italian multicenter 'real life' study

Authors :
Maida Bada
Eugenio Martorana
Luigi Schips
Silvana Giacinti
Cosimo De Nunzio
Giuseppe Mario Ludovico
Marcello Scarcia
Stefano Boccasile
Giampaolo Bianchi
Maurizio Valeriani
Anastasia Laudisi
Salvatore Micali
Pasquale Ditonno
Mino Rizzo
Clara Natoli
Paolo Verze
Oscar Selvaggio
Michele De Tursi
Luca Cindolo
Vincenzo Mirone
Paolo Chiodini
Pierluigi Bove
Giuseppe Carrieri
Pietro Castellan
Cindolo, Luca
Natoli, Clara
De Nunzio, Cosimo
De Tursi, Michele
Valeriani, Maurizio
Giacinti, Silvana
Micali, Salvatore
Rizzo, Mino
Bianchi, Giampaolo
Martorana, Eugenio
Scarcia, Marcello
Ludovico, Giuseppe Mario
Bove, Pierluigi
Laudisi, Anastasia
Selvaggio, Oscar
Carrieri, Giuseppe
Bada, Maida
Castellan, Pietro
Boccasile, Stefano
Ditonno, Pasquale
Chiodini, Paolo
Verze, Paolo
Mirone, Vincenzo
Schips, Luigi
Source :
BMC Cancer, Vol 17, Iss 1, Pp 1-8 (2017), BMC Cancer
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2017.

Abstract

Background To evaluate the safety and efficacy of abiraterone acetate (AA) in the “real life” clinical practice for men with chemotherapy-naïve metastatic castration-resistant prostate. Methods A consecutive series of patients with mCRPC in 9 Italian tertiary centres treated with AA was collected. Demographics, clinical parameters, treatment outcomes and toxicity were recorded. The Brief Pain Inventory scale Q3 was tracked and patient treatment satisfaction was evaluated. Survival curves were estimated by the method of Kaplan-Meier and Cox regression and compared by the log-rank test statistic. Results We included 145 patients (mean age 76.5y). All patients were on androgen deprivation therapy. Patients had prior radiotherapy, radical prostatectomy, both treatments or exclusive androgen deprivation therapy in 17%, 33%, 9% and 40%, respectively. 57% of the patients had a Gleason score higher more than 7 at diagnosis. 62% were asymptomatic patients. The median serum total PSA at AA start was 17 ng/mL (range 0,4–2100). The median exposure to AA was 10 months (range 1–35). The proportion of patients achieving a PSA decline ≥50% at 12 weeks was 49%. Distribution of patient satisfaction was 32% “greatly improved”, 38% “improved”, 24% “not changed”, 5.5% “worsened”. Grade 3 and 4 toxicity was recorded in 17/145 patients 11.7% (70% cardiovascular events, 30% critical elevation of AST/ALT levels). At the last follow-up, median progression free and overall survival were 17 and 26.5 months, respectively. Both outcomes significantly correlated with the presence of pain, patient satisfaction, PSA baseline and PSA decline. Conclusions The AA is effective and well tolerated in asymptomatic or slightly symptomatic mCRPC in a “real life” setting. The survival outcomes are influenced by the presence of pain, patient satisfaction, baseline PSA and PSA decline. Trial registration The study was retrospectively registered at ISRCTN as DOI:10.1186/ISRCTN 52513758 in date April the 30th 2016. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (10.1186/s12885-017-3755-x) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Details

ISSN :
14712407
Volume :
17
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BMC Cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5c5676c9e438289097281c7e8e0eb5f7
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12885-017-3755-x