Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Bikalutamid" in Turkish language version.
On the other hand, the 150 mg dose of bicalutamide has been associated with some safety concerns, such as a higher death rate when added to active surveillance in the early prostate cancer trialists group study [29], which has led the United States and Canada to recommend against prescribing the 150 mg dose [30].
Bone density improves in men receiving bicalutamide, most likely secondary to the 146% increase in estradiol and the fact that estradiol is the major mediator of bone density in men.
Bicalutamide is the most widely used antiandrogen in the treatment of prostate cancer. [...] Common side effects [of bicalutamide] include breast enlargement, breast tenderness, hot flashes, and constipation as well as feminization and changes in mood and liver as well as lung toxicity; monitoring of liver enzymes is recommended during treatment (Schellhammer and Davis 2004).
Four other randomized trials using BICmono have also raised concerns about either lack of efficacy or even harm from this treatment approach compared with placebo or no hormone therapy. SPCG-6 randomized 1218 patients to either 150 mg of BICmono daily or placebo. In the subset of patients with LPCa managed with observation, survival was significantly worse with BIC than placebo (hazard ratio [HR], 1.47; 95% confidence interval, 1.06-2.03).10 Two other randomized trials were part of the early prostate cancer program,11 which conducted 3 randomized trials that were pooled together to determine the benefit of BICmono (SPCG-6 was one of the 3 trials). Overall, in the combined 8113 patient pooled cohort, after a median follow-up of 7 years, there was no improvement even in progression-free survival from the use of adjuvant BIC in LPCa, and there was a trend for worse overall survival (HR, 1.16; 95% confidence interval, 0.99-1.37; P = .07). [...] Although not in LPCa, NRG/RTOG 9601 demonstrated findings consistent with the prior trials.12 This trial randomized men to postprostatectomy salvage radiation therapy plus placebo versus 150 mg of BICmono daily for 2 years. After a median follow-up of 13 years, the trial showed that there were significantly more grade 3 to 5 cardiac events in the BICmono arm. In patients with less aggressive disease with lower PSAs (prostate-specific antigens; more analogous to LPCa), other-cause mortality was significantly higher in the BICmono arm. In patients with high PSAs >1.5 ng/mL (which with modern molecular positron emission tomography imaging would be expected to have high rates of regional and distant metastatic disease), a survival benefit from the addition of BIC was observed. This is consistent with results from the early prostate cancer studies that showed that only patients with more advanced disease derived benefit from BICmono.10 Thus, all the randomized evidence from 5 trials (Table 1) demonstrates that, in LPCa, BICmono had no clinically significant oncologic activity over placebo/no treatment, and consistent trends with long-term use resulted in worse survival.
[...] the most commonly prescribed treatment for metastatic castration resistant prostate cancer: bicalutamide. That was sold as AstraZeneca's billion-dollar-a-year drug Casodex before losing patent protection in 2008. AstraZeneca still generates a few hundred million dollars in sales from Casodex, [...]
Four other randomized trials using BICmono have also raised concerns about either lack of efficacy or even harm from this treatment approach compared with placebo or no hormone therapy. SPCG-6 randomized 1218 patients to either 150 mg of BICmono daily or placebo. In the subset of patients with LPCa managed with observation, survival was significantly worse with BIC than placebo (hazard ratio [HR], 1.47; 95% confidence interval, 1.06-2.03).10 Two other randomized trials were part of the early prostate cancer program,11 which conducted 3 randomized trials that were pooled together to determine the benefit of BICmono (SPCG-6 was one of the 3 trials). Overall, in the combined 8113 patient pooled cohort, after a median follow-up of 7 years, there was no improvement even in progression-free survival from the use of adjuvant BIC in LPCa, and there was a trend for worse overall survival (HR, 1.16; 95% confidence interval, 0.99-1.37; P = .07). [...] Although not in LPCa, NRG/RTOG 9601 demonstrated findings consistent with the prior trials.12 This trial randomized men to postprostatectomy salvage radiation therapy plus placebo versus 150 mg of BICmono daily for 2 years. After a median follow-up of 13 years, the trial showed that there were significantly more grade 3 to 5 cardiac events in the BICmono arm. In patients with less aggressive disease with lower PSAs (prostate-specific antigens; more analogous to LPCa), other-cause mortality was significantly higher in the BICmono arm. In patients with high PSAs >1.5 ng/mL (which with modern molecular positron emission tomography imaging would be expected to have high rates of regional and distant metastatic disease), a survival benefit from the addition of BIC was observed. This is consistent with results from the early prostate cancer studies that showed that only patients with more advanced disease derived benefit from BICmono.10 Thus, all the randomized evidence from 5 trials (Table 1) demonstrates that, in LPCa, BICmono had no clinically significant oncologic activity over placebo/no treatment, and consistent trends with long-term use resulted in worse survival.
Bone density improves in men receiving bicalutamide, most likely secondary to the 146% increase in estradiol and the fact that estradiol is the major mediator of bone density in men.
[...] the most commonly prescribed treatment for metastatic castration resistant prostate cancer: bicalutamide. That was sold as AstraZeneca's billion-dollar-a-year drug Casodex before losing patent protection in 2008. AstraZeneca still generates a few hundred million dollars in sales from Casodex, [...]