Neuroendocrine differentiation in prostatic carcinoma

PA Abrahamsson - The Prostate, 1999 - Wiley Online Library
PA Abrahamsson
The Prostate, 1999Wiley Online Library
BACKGROUND Information is presented on prostatic neuroendocrine cells and
neuroendocrine differentiation in prostatic carcinoma. The prognostic and therapeutic
implications of neuroendocrine differentiation in prostatic carcinoma are reviewed.
METHODS Data are presented that support the intriguing link between neuroendocrine
differentiation, tumor progression, and androgen‐independent prostate cancer. The
hormones, and the receptors, expressed by prostatic neuroendocrine cells are investigated …
BACKGROUND
Information is presented on prostatic neuroendocrine cells and neuroendocrine differentiation in prostatic carcinoma. The prognostic and therapeutic implications of neuroendocrine differentiation in prostatic carcinoma are reviewed.
METHODS
Data are presented that support the intriguing link between neuroendocrine differentiation, tumor progression, and androgen‐independent prostate cancer. The hormones, and the receptors, expressed by prostatic neuroendocrine cells are investigated in order to elucidate their significance for prognosis and therapy.
RESULTS
The prognostic significance of neuroendocrine differentiation in prostatic malignancy has been controversial, but recent studies employing markers such as chromogranin A and neuron‐specific enolase suggest that neuroendocrine differentiation, as reflected by increased tissue expression and/or blood levels of these neuroendocrine secretory products, correlates with poor prognosis, tumor progression, and androgen‐independence. Since all malignant neuroendocrine cells are devoid of androgen receptors and since neuroendocrine phenotypic expression is not suppressed by androgen ablation, clonal propagation of androgen receptor‐negative neuroendocrine cells may play an important role in the pathway towards the androgen‐independent state of prostatic carcinoma. This would have significant implications for the treatment of prostate cancer, as several of the hormones known to be expressed by neuroendocrine‐differentiated, malignant prostatic cells are potential candidates for drug therapy. A limited number of hormones have been tested in this context, in particular somatostatin, bombesin, and serotonin.
CONCLUSIONS
Neuroendocrine differentiation in carcinoma of the prostate appears to be associated with poor prognosis, tumor progression, and the androgen‐independent state, for which there is currently no successful therapy. Therefore, new therapeutic protocols and trials need to be developed to test drugs based on neuroendocrine hormones and/or their antagonists. An evaluation of this new therapeutic approach against prostatic carcinoma with neuroendocrine differentiation, including hormone‐refractory cancer, is easily justified, since these tumors are unresponsive to current modes of therapy. Prostate 39:135–148, 1999. © 1999 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
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