Over 355,000 Monthly Readers
IN FOCUS FOR PEOPLE Over 50
  • Home
  • Health
  • Money
  • Travel
  • Arts
  • Cover Stories
  • Housing
  • From the Publisher
  • Contact us
  • Silver Pages Dir.
  1. Home
  2. Health

Health

SEARCH Health

Zapping metastatic tumors with radiation

For some men, this strategy eliminates the need for hormonal therapy. Photo from Tribune News Service
  • Share
PRINT
By Charlie Schmidt
Posted on August 30, 2023

Oligometastatic cancer is an early form of stage 4 prostate cancer that has spread to other organs in the body, but only to a limited degree — generally defined as no more than three to five areas outside the prostate gland, most commonly the lymph nodes or bones.

Barely a decade ago, it was considered universally fatal, and treatment was limited to systemic hormonal therapies that shut down testosterone, a hormone that drives the tumors to grow.

But now, exciting developments in the field are leading to new treatment strategies that are improving patient survival in clinical trials. These strategies are enabled by advances in medical imaging, revealing metastatic tumors that were previously too small to see.

Doctors can now treat the tumors directly with radiation or surgery. This is called metastasis-directed therapy (MDT), and it is allowing some men with oligometastatic prostate cancer to delay or even completely avoid hormonal therapy, along with its challenging side effects.

Now, results from an important study show that beneficial responses to MDT hold up with long-term follow-up.

The researchers’ methodology

To generate the findings, researchers combined results from two prior studies that randomized men to MDT or observation: one called STOMP and another called ORIOLE.

The men in those studies were treated with a technique called stereotactic ablative radiotherapy, which focuses intense beams of radiation on tumors from multiple directions while sparing healthy tissues.

Taken together, the studies showed that MDT delays cancer progression and the subsequent need for hormonal therapy. After they were published, MDT started becoming more widely adopted.

For this study, the STOMP and ORIOLE subjects were combined into a single group of 116 men with a median follow-up of 52.5 months. The research aimed to compare differences in progression-free survival (the amount of time it takes for the cancer to worsen) between men who were treated with MDT and those who were not.

Results showed a clear benefit from radiation: progression-free survival lasted 11.9 months, on average, among the MDT-treated men, compared to 5.9 months among the untreated controls.

But the researchers also went a step further. They analyzed archived samples of the subjects’ blood and tumor tissues for cancer-associated mutations in five different genes: ATM, BRCA1, BRCA2, Rb1, and TP53.

Again, the data revealed a stark discrepancy: progression-free survival lasted an average of 7.5 months among men with at least one mutation, compared to 13.4 months on average among those who had none.

Remarkably, progression-free survival lasted four years or longer in up to 20% of the MDT-treated men, regardless of their mutational status. But in general, men lacking in the mutations had the best responses.

MDT by itself may be initially sufficient for these men, the researchers concluded. While among those with high-risk mutations, MDT might be more effective if paired with a systemic therapy [such as hormones].

An expert’s reaction

“The authors should be applauded for their respectable follow-up of 52 months,” said Dr. Nima Aghdam, a radiation oncologist at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston and a member of the Harvard Medical School Annual Report on Prostate Diseases advisory board. In the right setting, Aghdam added, MDT can be delivered safely, delaying treatments that often lead to a decline in the patient’s quality of life.

Selecting the right patients for treatment is critical, but the mutations identified “may allow us in the future to determine who will benefit most from MDT,” he said.

It may be, Aghdam said, that MDT given by itself offers a pathway for a long-term, disease-free period among patients treated in community settings.

“This will require longer studies to clarify,” he said, “but the possibility that a good proportion of patients can defer [hormone therapy] for a long time will be broadly appreciated.”

© 2023 Harvard University. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Health 2023

  • January
  • February
  • March
  • April
  • May
  • June
  • July
  • August
  • September

#Oil #Health Study #Recipes #Savvy Senior #Coronavirus

2022
Health Archive

2023BEACON 50+EXPOS

Mark your calendar for this year's Expos, 10/15 in Springfield, VA, and 10/22 in Silver Spring, MD.

2023Mont. Co.

SENIORS' RESOURCE GUIDE

Click here to see the 2023 Seniors' Resource Guide.

Silver PagesDirectory

FIND WHAT YOU NEED, FAST.

This comprehensive, searchable directory covers
housing, homecare, elder law and financial planning

CommunityEvents

A CALENDAR JUST FOR YOU

Find fun, interesting, informative things to do Or post your upcoming event on our website!

Silver PagesDirectory

FIND WHAT YOU NEED, FAST.

This comprehensive, searchable directory covers housing, homecare, elder law and financial planning

Submit PrintClassifieds

ALL PRINT CLASSIFIEDS ARE SUBMITTED ONLINE

Click here to submit your classifieds for one of our upcoming print editions.

CommunityEvents

A CALENDAR JUST FOR YOU

Find fun, interesting, informative things to do Or post your upcoming event on our website!

About the Beacon

Over 50 or love someone who is? Then consider the Beacon your resource for trustworthy information on health, money, technology and travel topics, as well as entertaining features, arts and events.

The Beacon’s award-winning content covers health, financial, technology, housing, travel and arts topics, as well as local events and feature stories. Readers of our three print editions pick up more than 179,000 copies each month at more than 2,000 distribution sites. We also mail copies to subscribers throughout the United States.

Contact Us

THE BEACON NEWSPAPERS

PO Box 2227  •  Silver Spring, MD 20915

WASHINGTON, DC

TEL: 301-949-9766  •  FAX: 301-949-8966

HOWARD COUNTY & BALTIMORE, MD

TEL: 410-248-9101  •  FAX: 301-949-8966

More on our Website

  • About
  • Advertise with us
  • Staff
  • Resource Guide
  • Awards
  • Privacy Policy
  • The 50+Expos
  • Recipes
  • Puzzles
  • Community Events
  • Celebration of the Arts
Contact us Classified Form Subscription Form