Although
most advanced prostate cancer patients respond to androgen-deprivation therapy
(ADT), the efficacy is widely variable. We investigated whether the host
genetic variations in sex hormone pathway genes are associated with the
efficacy of ADT. A cohort of 645 patients with advanced prostate cancer treated
with ADT was genotyped for 18 polymorphisms across 12 key genes involved in
androgen and estrogen metabolism. We found that after adjusting for known risk
factors in multivariate Cox regression models, AKR1C3 rs12529 and AR-CAG repeat
length remained significantly associated with prostate cancer-specific
mortality (PCSM) after ADT (P≤0.041). Furthermore, individuals carrying two
unfavorable genotypes at these loci presented a 13.7-fold increased risk of
PCSM compared with individuals carrying zero (P<0.001). Our results identify
two candidate molecular markers in key genes of androgen and estrogen pathways
associated with PCSM after ADT, establishing the role of pharmacogenomics in
this therapy.
Source: Molecular
markers in sex hormone pathway genes associated with the efficacy of
androgen-deprivation therapy for prostate cancer. Yu CC, Huang SP, Lee YC,
Huang CY, Liu CC, Hour TC, Huang CN, You BJ, Chang TY, Huang CH, Bao BY. PLoS
One. 2013;8(1):e54627.
Free
paper available at:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3554749/pdf/pone.0054627.pdf
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