While medical treatments that decrease testosterone
levels—called androgen deprivation therapy (ADT)—are important and
effective therapies for men with prostate cancer, they can cause a
variety of side effects including skeletal and cardiovascular
complications, sexual dysfunction, periodontal disease, and mood
disorders.
Bone and heart complications are among the most
serious side effects associated with ADT, but the actual risk patients
have of developing these effects is unknown. Lockwood Taylor, MPH, of
the University of Texas Health Science Center and colleagues conducted a
study to assess this risk by analyzing all of the literature related to
side effects from ADT.
The researchers’ review revealed that men treated with ADT for prostate cancer
had an increased risk of bone fractures and heart-related death,
although the absolute risk for both was still low. For bone fractures,
there was a 23 percent increased risk compared to prostate cancer
patients who did not undergo the treatment. The absolute risk of
fracture among ADT-exposed men was still only 7.2 per 100 person years.
For heart-related death, the increased risk among ADT-exposed men was 17
percent higher compared to other prostate cancer patients. However,
because the baseline risk is low, the increase translated to an
additional one-to-two deaths per 1,000 men who received ADT. Two large
studies also documented significant increases in diabetes risk
associated with the therapy.
“While the absolute risks of fracture and
cardiovascular mortality are low among men treated with androgen
deprivation therapy, preventive treatments may further reduce the risk
of these serious adverse outcomes related to androgen deprivation
therapy,” the authors wrote. They also noted that because some patients
may benefit from this therapy more than others, physicians should
consider each patient’s overall health and prostate cancer status when weighing treatment options.
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