A Trial of Triamcinolone With a GnRH Analog for Castration Resistant Prostate Cancer
Status:
COMPLETED
Trial end date:
2020-09-24
Target enrollment:
Participant gender:
Summary
When metastatic prostate cancer becomes unresponsive to hormone therapy, it is known as castration resistant prostate cancer, treatment options are limited and response to this treatment can be short.
The standard treatment for this type of cancer (hydrocortisone or dexamethasone) gives an average response time of 4 months. After this chemotherapy would be considered. In this patient population the majority of men are aged over 70, so giving chemotherapy with its associated toxicities; can reduce the quality of life for patients, and it is preferable to delay this treatment option until absolutely necessary. With this in mind, treating with triamcinolone aims to increase this period of response.
One of the ways that castration resistant prostate cancer develops is by acquiring a mutations that allow it to respond to other steroids both endogenous e.g. cortisol and also to synthetic steroids being used to control the disease e.g. dexamethasone. No known mutation allows a response to triamcinolone, a unique finding amongst steroids.
To date there has been one clinical study looking at giving oral triamcinolone, but as yet there has been not study of intramuscular triamcinolone