Radium (Ra) has emerged as treatment prolonging survival in patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC). As Ra can cause hematotoxicity (HT), pre-existing hematopoiesis might influence the efficacy of Ra and the rate of hematotoxicity, but as to our knowledge such data has not been published yet, we retrospectively conducted an analysis on patients receiving Ra. 54 patients treated with Ra had a median survival of 67 weeks, which was significantly reduced in patients with pre-existing Hb toxicity (Tox) grade 2 (48 weeks = 0.008) as compared to grade 1 (67 weeks) and normal levels of Hb (not reached); survival in patients with Plt Tox grade 1 was significantly reduced (44 weeks) as compared to normal Plt counts (71 weeks, = 0.033). Patients with impaired hematopoiesis regarding Hb and Plts developed significantly more grade 3 and 4 HT (Hb < 10 g/dl: 42.9% [3/7] vs 10.6% [5/47], < 0.001; Plt < 150 G/L: 28.6% [2/7] vs 6.4% [3/47], = 0.002) and received significantly fewer treatment cycles (Hb <10 g/dl: 5.1 vs 5.8, = 0.04; Plt < 150 G/L: 3.4 vs 5.6, < 0.001). These results imply that pre-existing impaired hematopoiesis, in particular thrombocytopenia and anemia, before Ra therapy, is an important risk factor for worse outcome of treatment with Ra.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5882327 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.24610 | DOI Listing |
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