management of advanced, metastatic prostatic carcinoma
Last edited 07/2021 and last reviewed 11/2021
The management options include:
- bilateral orchidectomy
- healthcare professionals should offer bilateral orchidectomy to all
men with metastatic prostate cancer as an alternative to continuous LHRH
agonist therapy (1)
- healthcare professionals should offer bilateral orchidectomy to all
men with metastatic prostate cancer as an alternative to continuous LHRH
agonist therapy (1)
- LHRH agonist
- anti-androgen monotherapy
- do not offer combined androgen blockade as a first-line treatment for men with metastatic prostate cancer
- metastatic prostate cancer who are willing to accept the adverse impact on overall survival and gynaecomastia in the hope of retaining sexual function, anti-androgen monotherapy with bicalutamide should be offered (1)
- begin androgen deprivation therapy and stop bicalutamide treatment in men with metastatic prostate cancer who are taking bicalutamide monotherapy and who do not maintain satisfactory sexual function
- maximal androgen blockade:
- bilateral orchidectomy plus
- anti-androgen
- combined androgen blockade is not recommended as a first-line treatment
for men with metastatic prostate cancer (1)
- chemotherapy:
- docetaxel is recommended, within its licensed indications, as a treatment
option for men with hormone-refractory metastatic prostate cancer only
if their Karnofsky performance-status score is 60% or more (2)
- docetaxel is recommended, within its licensed indications, as a treatment
option for men with hormone-refractory metastatic prostate cancer only
if their Karnofsky performance-status score is 60% or more (2)
- bisphosphonates
- bisphosphonates for pain relief may be considered for men with hormone-refractory
prostate cancer when other treatments (including analgesics and palliative
radiotherapy) have failed
- should not be used routinely to prevent osteoporosis in men with
prostate cancer receiving androgen withdrawal therapy
- should not be used routinely to prevent osteoporosis in men with
prostate cancer receiving androgen withdrawal therapy
- bisphosphonates for pain relief may be considered for men with hormone-refractory
prostate cancer when other treatments (including analgesics and palliative
radiotherapy) have failed
Reference:
hormonal manipulation in prostatic cancer
Karnofsky Performance-Status Scores
bisphosphonates in prostate cancer
NICE guidance - Enzalutamide for treating hormone-sensitive metastatic prostate cancer