JAMES A. EASTHAM, MD: When someone has a rising PSA despite being on hormonal therapy, there are several additional hormonal manipulations or hormonal changes that can be made. If a patient is on what is called an antiandrogen, which is a medicine that actually blocks testosterone from binding its binding site or receptor, you can manipulate that. You can actually stop the antiandrogen.
DANIEL P. PETRYLAK, MD: There is almost a paradoxical withdrawal effect by stopping these medications, we sometimes, in about 20 to 30 percent of patients, see a PSA decline.
ANNOUNCER: But even among those patients, the effect will likely be temporary. At this stage, depending on a variety of factors, a patient may have only one or two years to live. Doctors traditionally could do little beyond helping prevent bone fractures, and managing pain. And there wasn't much of a role for chemotherapy in prostate cancer, until recently.
JAMES A. EASTHAM, MD: Probably the initial advance in chemotherapy was a drug called mitoxantrone, which, while it did not prolong survival, did help with symptoms of pain. And men who were on the drug had greater pain relief than men who did not receive mitoxantrone.
More recently, the taxanes, primarily Taxotere, which is a chemotherapy drug, has been shown to actually not only help with pain, but also prolong survival in prostate cancer. Again, these are men with advanced, what we would call hormone refractory prostate cancer.