Health & Medical STDs Sexual Health & Reproduction

New Therapy May Fight Prostate Cancer

New Therapy May Fight Prostate Cancer June 19, 2009 -- Mayo Clinic researchers say an experimental treatment may have cured two patients whose prostate cancers were so advanced they had been considered inoperable.

Both patients were reportedly free of cancer after treatment with a combination of hormone therapy, an experimental immunotherapy, and surgery.

No one was more surprised than their doctors. "This is certainly not the way we thought it would go," Mayo urologist and immunologist Eugene Kwon, MD, tells WebMD.

He adds that the point of the treatment had been to buy some time for patients whose cancers appeared to be incurable.

The two men were originally enrolled in a study designed to determine if treatment to suppress testosterone (known as androgen ablation), followed by treatment with an experimental immunotherapy called ipilimumab, could slow the progression of advanced prostate cancer.

"The goal was to see if we could modestly improve upon current treatments," Kwon says.

The 85 patients in the study were not considered candidates for surgery, but several showed such dramatic regressions in their cancers that they left the trial in order to have it.

Kwon admits that this was done in the first patient not because the study investigators thought it was a good idea, but because the patient's wife insisted.

"Even though this patient had remarkable reduction in disease, we still did not think surgery would be beneficial," he says. "But in a two-hour, late-night phone conversation that became quite acrimonious, she demanded that we take her husband off the study and do surgery."

More than a year and a half later, that patient shows no signs of prostate cancer, Kwon says.

One other patient who also left the study to have surgery also appears free of the cancer, and a third patient was operated on last week.

"This occurred not because we as physicians and scientists were so brilliant, but because a patient's wife re-crafted our thinking about what was achievable," he says.

Second Opinion


But just how promising is the treatment that Kwon and colleagues ended up with?

A prostate cancer specialist who spoke to WebMD says that remains to be seen.
SHARE
RELATED POSTS on "Health & Medical"
Cures For Genital Herpes That Keep You Outbreak Free Forever
Cures For Genital Herpes That Keep You Outbreak Free Forever
Gleason Score and Staging
Gleason Score and Staging
Single Men Show Higher Risk of Cancer-Linked Oral HPV
Single Men Show Higher Risk of Cancer-Linked Oral HPV
The Stigma of Herpes Can Be Worse Than the Virus Itself
The Stigma of Herpes Can Be Worse Than the Virus Itself
Way Too Personal
Way Too Personal
New Hope for HIV Vaccine
New Hope for HIV Vaccine
Experts Debate Merits of School-Based Testing for STDs
Experts Debate Merits of School-Based Testing for STDs
Marital Satisfaction Plays Role in Heart Bypass Survival
Marital Satisfaction Plays Role in Heart Bypass Survival
Why Do Women Lose Their Sex Drive After Menopause?
Why Do Women Lose Their Sex Drive After Menopause?
Where Does HPV Come From?
Where Does HPV Come From?
Sexual Problems in Men
Sexual Problems in Men
Herpes Vaccine in the Spotlight
Herpes Vaccine in the Spotlight
Marriage
Marriage
How to Identify Testicular Cancer
How to Identify Testicular Cancer
Can Couples Counseling Help?
Can Couples Counseling Help?
Risk Versus Recreation Sex and the STD Test
Risk Versus Recreation Sex and the STD Test
Effectiveness of Spermacide Condoms
Effectiveness of Spermacide Condoms
Gonorrhea Can Kill
Gonorrhea Can Kill
Drug Fights Resistant Prostate Tumors
Drug Fights Resistant Prostate Tumors
Life Can Get Better -- Even with AIDS
Life Can Get Better -- Even with AIDS
Anger Management: Counting to 10 and Beyond
Anger Management: Counting to 10 and Beyond
A Step-by-Step Guide to Understanding IVF Treatment
A Step-by-Step Guide to Understanding IVF Treatment
The HIV Pandemic Is Still Growing
The HIV Pandemic Is Still Growing

Leave Your Reply

*