Levels of Circulating Tumor Cells Could Predict Prostate Cancer Outcome

New method of tracking changes proves better predictor than PSA, study says

Posted: February 11, 2009

WEDNESDAY, Feb. 11 (HealthDay News) -- Checking for changes in the number of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) could help doctors predict advanced prostate cancer patients' survival and response to treatment, U.S. researchers report.

They studied the association between CTC numbers (before and after treatment) and survival, along with other factors such as changes in levels of prostate-specific antigen (PSA) and baseline lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) in 164 prostate cancer patients starting first-line chemotherapy regimens.

High values of CTC numbers and PSA levels before treatment were associated with increased risk of death. At four, eight and 12 weeks after treatment, changes in CTC numbers were strongly associated with increased risk of death, while changes in PSA were only marginally associated with increased risk of death.

The findings confirm that pre-treatment CTC numbers help predict survival of prostate cancer patients starting first-line chemotherapy. CTC numbers also help monitor disease status and response to treatment, and CTC is a better predictor than PSA, the researchers said.

"CTC number[s] ... can be used to monitor disease status and might be useful as an intermediate endpoint of survival in clinical trials," wrote study author Howard Sher, of Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York City. "Use as an intermediate or surrogate endpoint for survival could shorten the time line for drug approval," although "several prospective trials are needed to generate evidence to guide the use of biomarkers."

The study was published online and will appear in the March print issue of The Lancet Oncology.

More information

The American Cancer Society has more about prostate cancer.

Of Course Prostate Cancer Is Curable! Alas, not all, though.

The first commenter worte:

"There is no cure for this cancer, none, zip!"

Err... do you have any evidence for that depressing statement??

Because it's simply not true! If you have prostate cancer confined to the gland (not metastasized) and the prostate is surgically removed in its entirety, yes, it is cured! There is no more cancer. Gone, never to return - and that's the definition of cured, yes?

Even for those who are not "cured", the survival rate for prostate cancer is excellent, compared to nearly every other cancer. The majority of patients, even if not cured, will go on to die of some other cause before the prostate cancer becomes life-threatening. I.e., most prostate cancer patients will die "with" their disease, not "of" it. This is scant comfort, of course, to those unfortunate patients whose disease is aggressive and disabling and possibly fatal. It is to that group that this new monitoring method (CTCs) may prove helpful in deciding how aggressive treatment should be, and as a predicter of when new treatments are succeeding.

-Anita (a Cancer Research Scientist)

Anita of NJ @ Feb 11, 2009 14:07:01 PM

Cancer of the Prostate

There is no cure for this cancer, none, zip!

John Krienke of WI @ Feb 11, 2009 11:39:42 AM

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