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New guidelines for low-risk prostate cancer patients receiving androgen deprivation therapy

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Men with prostate cancer who are being treated with androgen deprivation therapy are at increased risk of osteoporotic fractures, type 2 diabetes, and possibly, cardiovascular events, a new set of management guidelines states.

The guidelines, published in the Medical Journal of Australia, were developed to guide assessment and management of bone and metabolic health in men with non-metastatic prostate cancer who are being treated with androgen deprivation therapy (ADT).

The guidelines have been endorsed by the Endocrine Society of Australia, the Australian and New Zealand Bone and Mineral Society, and the Urological Society of Australia and New Zealand.

ADT is the standard first-line therapy for men with metastatic prostate cancer – cancer that is spreading to other organs – but is increasingly being used for men with non-metastatic cancer.

Dr Mathis Grossmann, Senior Research Fellow in the Department of Medicine at Austin Health/Northern Health at the University of Melbourne, and co-authors recommended counselling patients about possible risk factors before starting treatment, an individualised, multidisciplinary approach for each patient, and regular testing for bone mineral density and metabolic risk factors.

Dr Grossmann said that prostate cancer was the most common solid organ cancer in Australian men, with 20,000 new cases being diagnosed in Australia each year.

“The prevalence of prostate cancer is increasing because the population is ageing and prostate-specific antigen testing is occurring more frequently,” Dr Grossmann said.


“This has led to a profound shift towards detecting more clinically localised, low-risk prostate cancer.

At the same time, the rate of use of ADT in men with non-metastatic prostate cancer has increased, with an estimated 23,500 men being treated in Australia during 2008–09.

Dr Grossmann said that the expanded use of ADT in non-palliative treatment mandated a proper risk–benefit assessment in a multidisciplinary fashion.

The developers of the guidelines called for controlled trials to better define the risk-benefit ratio of ADT.

“Such information will help to avoid overuse of ADT, especially for men who have a high baseline risk of fractures and cardiovascular events but low-risk prostate cancer,” they said.

(Source: Australian Medical AssociationMedical Journal of Australia)

More information

Prostate cancer
For more information on prostate cancer, including diagnoses, types of treatments, and some useful tools, videos and animations, see Prostate Cancer
.


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Dates

Posted On: 5 April, 2011
Modified On: 15 January, 2014

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