The Debate Continues, Is IAD or CAD Superior for the Treatment of Men with Castrate Resistant Prostate Cancer?

A new randomized study (FinnProstate Study VII) on the merits of intermittent androgen deprivation (IAD) compared to continuous androgen therapy (CAD) contradicts the recent revelations from the last ASCO presentation (Hussain et.al) where the clear conclusion was that CAD was superior to IAD. At the ASCO conference Dr. Hussain’s study concluded that IAD was significantly [...]

Hormone Therapy Will Only Last for A Short Time – A Myth Worthy of Being Debunked

One of the more common myths about hormone therapy (ADT) to treat prostate cancer is that its effectiveness will last only for one and a half to two years. For some men this might be true, but it is not a reality in today’s prostate cancer landscape. What makes this myth worse is that it [...]

New Research Contradicts Prior Understanding – Intermittent Hormone Therapy for Prostate Cancer Inferior to Continuous Therapy

At the American Society for Clinical Oncology's (ASCO) meeting there was an upsetting plenary presentation made on June 3. Data was presented by principal investigator, Maha Hussain, M.D., F.A.C.P., from the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center. Dr. Hussain discussed the findings from the phase III clinical trial SWOG-9346, the largest such study to date [...]

Early Hormone Therapy Delays Disease Progression in Advanced Prostate Cancer

Despite the fact that we have had good research for well over 15 years that show that early hormone therapy increases over all survival, some doctors still insist on delaying the start of hormone therapy. A UK randomized trial done in 1997 demonstrated a slight impact of immediate versus deferred hormone suppression in advanced prostate [...]

Hormonal Therapy (ADT) Is Associated With An Increase of Thrombotic Events

A recent article in the journal Cancer reported that there is an association for men being treated for prostate cancer with androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) and a risk of developing blood clots. The article, written by Edhaie et al. analyzed the Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) –Medicare database to identify 154,611 men over the [...]

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