Bone Health Issues in Patients with Prostate Cancer: An Evidence-Based Review.
Simon WalzMoritz MaasArnulf StenzlTilman TodenhöferPublished in: The world journal of men's health (2019)
Bone health in prostate cancer patients represents a prerequisite for acceptable quality of life and optimal outcome of this disease. The major threat for bone health in prostate cancer displays cancer treatment induced bone loss as well as the development of bone metastases. In recent years, several new pharmaceuticals targeting bone metabolism such as denosumab or androgen pathway targeting drugs (abiraterone acetate and enzalutamide) have been approved for the treatment of progressive disease aiming to interrupt the vicious circle of bone metastasis and aberrant bone resorption. This development raised the awareness of the pivotal role of bone health in prostate cancer and introduced (symptomatic) skeletal related events as an important end point in recent clinical trials. Bone targeted drugs have become standard of care in patients with metastatic castration resistant prostate cancer, their role in metastatic hormone sensitive prostate cancer has been discussed controversely. In oligometastatic prostate cancer patients several promising approaches in metastasis directed therapy, including conventional surgery, stereotactic ablative radiation and image-guided single-fraction robotic stereotactic radiosurgery (CyberKnife®) were launched but are not in routine clinical use until now caused by sparse clinical evidence.
Keyphrases
- prostate cancer
- bone loss
- bone mineral density
- radical prostatectomy
- healthcare
- public health
- clinical trial
- soft tissue
- mental health
- bone regeneration
- small cell lung cancer
- radiation therapy
- palliative care
- randomized controlled trial
- coronary artery disease
- multiple sclerosis
- prognostic factors
- oxidative stress
- health promotion
- social media
- cancer therapy
- drug delivery
- combination therapy
- chronic kidney disease
- drug induced
- quality improvement