Abstract

Based on pioneering work by Huggins, Hodges and others, hormonal therapies have been established as an effective approach for advanced prostate cancer (PC) for the past eight decades. However, it quickly became evident that androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) via surgical or medical castration accomplishes inadequate inhibition of the androgen receptor (AR) axis, with clinical resistance inevitably emerging due to adrenal and intratumoral sources of androgens and other mechanisms. Early efforts to augment ADT by adding adrenal-targeting agents (aminoglutethimide, ketoconazole) or AR antagonists (flutamide, bicalutamide, nilutamide, cyproterone) failed to achieve overall survival (OS) benefits, although they did exhibit some evidence of limited clinical activity. More recently, four new androgen receptor signaling inhibitors (ARSIs) successfully entered clinical practice. Specifically, the CYP17 inhibitor abiraterone acetate and the second generation AR antagonists (enzalutamide, apalutamide and darolutamide) achieved OS benefits for PC patients, confirmed the importance of reactivated AR signaling in castration-resistant PC and validated important concepts that had been proposed in the field several decades ago but had remained so far unproven, including adrenal-targeted therapy and combined androgen blockade. The past decade has seen steady advances toward more comprehensive AR axis targeting. Now the question is raised whether we have accomplished the maximum AR axis inhibition possible or there is still room for improvement. This review, marking the 80-year anniversary of ADT and 10-year anniversary of successful ARSIs, examines their current clinical use and discusses future directions, in particular combination regimens, to maximize their efficacy, delay emergence of resistance and improve patient outcomes.

Highlights

  • The pioneering work of Huggins & Hodges (1941), that we are celebrating in this issue of ERC (Zoubeidi & Ghosh 2021), set the framework for the hormonal treatment of advanced prostate cancer (PC), and was one of the first successful ‘targeted’ therapies for cancer in general

  • Earlier efforts to target the androgenic contribution of extra-gonadal sources in castration-resistant PC (CRPC) go back several decades, with some clinical successes, but never established a definitive prolongation of overall survival (OS) via Phase III randomized controlled trials (RCTs) in the preabiraterone/enzalutamide era

  • - Deeper androgen receptor (AR) axis inhibition accomplished better outcomes: It is clear that the concepts of adrenaltargeted therapy, anti-androgen use, and combined androgen blockade were correct but were previously impeded by the lack of good pharmacological agents

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Summary

THEMATIC REVIEW

Androgen receptor signaling inhibitors: post-chemotherapy, pre-chemotherapy and in castration-sensitive prostate cancer. This paper is part of a thematic review section celebrating 80 Years of Androgen Deprivation as a Treatment for Prostate Cancer. The guest editors for this section were Amina Zoubeidi and Paramita Ghosh

Introductory concepts and historical perspective
Historical review of older efforts
Better drugs validate old concepts
Novel ARSIs find their place in PC treatment
Abiraterone Enzalutamide Apalutamide Darolutamide
Timing of the intensification
Mechanisms of resistance to ARSIs
Findings
Future directions
Full Text
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