Cargando…

Does Exist a Differential Impact of Degarelix Versus LHRH Agonists on Cardiovascular Safety? Evidences From Randomized and Real-World Studies

The main systemic therapy for the management of hormone-sensitive prostate cancer (PC) is androgen deprivation therapy (ADT), with the use of long-acting luteinizing hormone releasing-hormone (LHRH) agonists considered the main form of ADT used in clinical practice to obtain castration in PC. The co...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Sciarra, Alessandro, Busetto, Gian Maria, Salciccia, Stefano, Del Giudice, Francesco, Maggi, Martina, Crocetto, Felice, Ferro, Matteo, De Berardinis, Ettore, Scarpa, Roberto Mario, Porpiglia, Francesco, Carmignani, Luca, Damiano, Rocco, Artibani, Walter, Carrieri, Giuseppe
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8237856/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34194398
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fendo.2021.695170
_version_ 1783714797880082432
author Sciarra, Alessandro
Busetto, Gian Maria
Salciccia, Stefano
Del Giudice, Francesco
Maggi, Martina
Crocetto, Felice
Ferro, Matteo
De Berardinis, Ettore
Scarpa, Roberto Mario
Porpiglia, Francesco
Carmignani, Luca
Damiano, Rocco
Artibani, Walter
Carrieri, Giuseppe
author_facet Sciarra, Alessandro
Busetto, Gian Maria
Salciccia, Stefano
Del Giudice, Francesco
Maggi, Martina
Crocetto, Felice
Ferro, Matteo
De Berardinis, Ettore
Scarpa, Roberto Mario
Porpiglia, Francesco
Carmignani, Luca
Damiano, Rocco
Artibani, Walter
Carrieri, Giuseppe
author_sort Sciarra, Alessandro
collection PubMed
description The main systemic therapy for the management of hormone-sensitive prostate cancer (PC) is androgen deprivation therapy (ADT), with the use of long-acting luteinizing hormone releasing-hormone (LHRH) agonists considered the main form of ADT used in clinical practice to obtain castration in PC. The concomitant administration of antiandrogens for the first weeks could reduce the incidence of clinical effects related to the testosterone flare-up in the first injection of LHRH. On the contrary, Gonadotropin Rh (GnRH) antagonists produce a rapid decrease of testosterone levels without the initial flare-up, with degarelix commonly used in clinical practice to induce castration in PC patients. Even if no long-term data are reported in terms of survival to define a superiority of GnRH or LHRH, for oncological efficacy and PC control, data from randomized clinical trials and from real-life experiences, suggest a difference in cardiovascular risk of patients starting ADT. The age-related decline in testosterone levels may represent a factor connected to the increase of cardiovascular disease risk, however, the role of ADT in increasing CV events remains controversial. For these reasons, the aim of the paper is to synthesize the difference in cardiovascular risk between LHRH and degarelix in patients undergoing ADT. A difference in cardiovascular risk could be indeed an important parameter in the evaluation of these two forms of castration therapy. The Randomized trials analyzed in this paper sustain a possible protective role for degarelix versus LHRH agonists in reducing the rate of new CV events and interventions in the short-term period. On the contrary, real-word data are contradictory in different national experiences and are strongly conditioned by huge differences between the LHRH agonists group and the degarelix group.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8237856
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-82378562021-06-29 Does Exist a Differential Impact of Degarelix Versus LHRH Agonists on Cardiovascular Safety? Evidences From Randomized and Real-World Studies Sciarra, Alessandro Busetto, Gian Maria Salciccia, Stefano Del Giudice, Francesco Maggi, Martina Crocetto, Felice Ferro, Matteo De Berardinis, Ettore Scarpa, Roberto Mario Porpiglia, Francesco Carmignani, Luca Damiano, Rocco Artibani, Walter Carrieri, Giuseppe Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) Endocrinology The main systemic therapy for the management of hormone-sensitive prostate cancer (PC) is androgen deprivation therapy (ADT), with the use of long-acting luteinizing hormone releasing-hormone (LHRH) agonists considered the main form of ADT used in clinical practice to obtain castration in PC. The concomitant administration of antiandrogens for the first weeks could reduce the incidence of clinical effects related to the testosterone flare-up in the first injection of LHRH. On the contrary, Gonadotropin Rh (GnRH) antagonists produce a rapid decrease of testosterone levels without the initial flare-up, with degarelix commonly used in clinical practice to induce castration in PC patients. Even if no long-term data are reported in terms of survival to define a superiority of GnRH or LHRH, for oncological efficacy and PC control, data from randomized clinical trials and from real-life experiences, suggest a difference in cardiovascular risk of patients starting ADT. The age-related decline in testosterone levels may represent a factor connected to the increase of cardiovascular disease risk, however, the role of ADT in increasing CV events remains controversial. For these reasons, the aim of the paper is to synthesize the difference in cardiovascular risk between LHRH and degarelix in patients undergoing ADT. A difference in cardiovascular risk could be indeed an important parameter in the evaluation of these two forms of castration therapy. The Randomized trials analyzed in this paper sustain a possible protective role for degarelix versus LHRH agonists in reducing the rate of new CV events and interventions in the short-term period. On the contrary, real-word data are contradictory in different national experiences and are strongly conditioned by huge differences between the LHRH agonists group and the degarelix group. Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-06-14 /pmc/articles/PMC8237856/ /pubmed/34194398 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fendo.2021.695170 Text en Copyright © 2021 Sciarra, Busetto, Salciccia, Del Giudice, Maggi, Crocetto, Ferro, De Berardinis, Scarpa, Porpiglia, Carmignani, Damiano, Artibani and Carrieri https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Endocrinology
Sciarra, Alessandro
Busetto, Gian Maria
Salciccia, Stefano
Del Giudice, Francesco
Maggi, Martina
Crocetto, Felice
Ferro, Matteo
De Berardinis, Ettore
Scarpa, Roberto Mario
Porpiglia, Francesco
Carmignani, Luca
Damiano, Rocco
Artibani, Walter
Carrieri, Giuseppe
Does Exist a Differential Impact of Degarelix Versus LHRH Agonists on Cardiovascular Safety? Evidences From Randomized and Real-World Studies
title Does Exist a Differential Impact of Degarelix Versus LHRH Agonists on Cardiovascular Safety? Evidences From Randomized and Real-World Studies
title_full Does Exist a Differential Impact of Degarelix Versus LHRH Agonists on Cardiovascular Safety? Evidences From Randomized and Real-World Studies
title_fullStr Does Exist a Differential Impact of Degarelix Versus LHRH Agonists on Cardiovascular Safety? Evidences From Randomized and Real-World Studies
title_full_unstemmed Does Exist a Differential Impact of Degarelix Versus LHRH Agonists on Cardiovascular Safety? Evidences From Randomized and Real-World Studies
title_short Does Exist a Differential Impact of Degarelix Versus LHRH Agonists on Cardiovascular Safety? Evidences From Randomized and Real-World Studies
title_sort does exist a differential impact of degarelix versus lhrh agonists on cardiovascular safety? evidences from randomized and real-world studies
topic Endocrinology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8237856/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34194398
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fendo.2021.695170
work_keys_str_mv AT sciarraalessandro doesexistadifferentialimpactofdegarelixversuslhrhagonistsoncardiovascularsafetyevidencesfromrandomizedandrealworldstudies
AT busettogianmaria doesexistadifferentialimpactofdegarelixversuslhrhagonistsoncardiovascularsafetyevidencesfromrandomizedandrealworldstudies
AT salcicciastefano doesexistadifferentialimpactofdegarelixversuslhrhagonistsoncardiovascularsafetyevidencesfromrandomizedandrealworldstudies
AT delgiudicefrancesco doesexistadifferentialimpactofdegarelixversuslhrhagonistsoncardiovascularsafetyevidencesfromrandomizedandrealworldstudies
AT maggimartina doesexistadifferentialimpactofdegarelixversuslhrhagonistsoncardiovascularsafetyevidencesfromrandomizedandrealworldstudies
AT crocettofelice doesexistadifferentialimpactofdegarelixversuslhrhagonistsoncardiovascularsafetyevidencesfromrandomizedandrealworldstudies
AT ferromatteo doesexistadifferentialimpactofdegarelixversuslhrhagonistsoncardiovascularsafetyevidencesfromrandomizedandrealworldstudies
AT deberardinisettore doesexistadifferentialimpactofdegarelixversuslhrhagonistsoncardiovascularsafetyevidencesfromrandomizedandrealworldstudies
AT scarparobertomario doesexistadifferentialimpactofdegarelixversuslhrhagonistsoncardiovascularsafetyevidencesfromrandomizedandrealworldstudies
AT porpigliafrancesco doesexistadifferentialimpactofdegarelixversuslhrhagonistsoncardiovascularsafetyevidencesfromrandomizedandrealworldstudies
AT carmignaniluca doesexistadifferentialimpactofdegarelixversuslhrhagonistsoncardiovascularsafetyevidencesfromrandomizedandrealworldstudies
AT damianorocco doesexistadifferentialimpactofdegarelixversuslhrhagonistsoncardiovascularsafetyevidencesfromrandomizedandrealworldstudies
AT artibaniwalter doesexistadifferentialimpactofdegarelixversuslhrhagonistsoncardiovascularsafetyevidencesfromrandomizedandrealworldstudies
AT carrierigiuseppe doesexistadifferentialimpactofdegarelixversuslhrhagonistsoncardiovascularsafetyevidencesfromrandomizedandrealworldstudies