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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Early effects of castration therapy in non-malignant and malignant prostate tissue

Ohlson, Nina January 2005 (has links)
Early Effects of Castration Therapy in Non-malignant and Malignant Prostate Tissue BACKGROUND. Androgen ablation, the standard treatment for advanced prostate cancer, results in increased apoptosis, decreased cell proliferation and subsequent involution of the prostate gland. The mechanisms behind these responses are largely unknown, but effects in the prostatic epithelium are believed to be mediated by primary changes in the stroma. The purpose of this thesis was to investigate short-term cellular effects of castration-induced prostate tissue involution in mice and humans. METHODS. Prostate tissue factors affected by castration were investigated using cDNA-arrays, micro-dissection, RT-PCR, immunohistochemistry and Western blot analysis. The effects of local insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) administration were investigated in intact and castrated mice. Non-malignant and malignant epithelial and stromal cells were micro-dissected from human prostate biopsies taken before and within two weeks after castration treatment from patients with advanced prostate cancer. These tissue compartments were analyzed by RT-PCR and/or immunohistochemistry for IGF-1, IGF-1 receptor, androgen receptor (AR) and prostate specific antigen (PSA) expression. Treatment-induced changes in these factors were related to apoptosis and proliferation as well as to clinical data and cancer specific survival. RESULTS. Similar to our observations in mouse ventral prostate (VP), non-malignant and malignant human prostate tissues responded with increased epithelial cell apoptosis and decreased proliferation after androgen withdrawal. Also, the PSA mRNA levels were reduced within the first days after therapy both in non-malignant and malignant human prostate epithelial cells. However, neither of these changes was related to subsequent nadir serum PSA or to survival. Locally injected IGF-1 increased epithelial cell proliferation and vascular volume in intact but not in castrated mice. IGF-1 was found to be mostly, but not exclusively, expressed in the stroma, and it decreased rapidly after castration in both humans and mice. This decrease was, however, largely absent in prostate tumor stroma, and tumor stroma cells showed lower pre-treatment levels of AR than stroma surrounding normal epithelial glands. Furthermore, decreased levels of IGF-1 mRNA in the non-malignant and tumor stroma cells, and in tumor epithelial cells in response to castration, were associated with high levels of apoptosis in epithelial cells after therapy. CONCLUSIONS. In the prostate, IGF-1 may be an important mediator of stroma-epithelial cell interaction that is involved in castration-induced epithelial and vascular involution. Moreover, reduced AR in the tumor stroma may play an important role in prostate cancer progression towards androgen-independency, resulting in inadequate IGF-1 reduction and apoptosis induction in response to castration. Most primary tumors initially respond to castration with markedly decreased PSA synthesis and cell proliferation, and moderately increased apoptosis. Death due to metastatic disease is, however, still common, despite primary tumor regression. This may suggest that tumor cells in metastases respond differently to treatment than primary tumor cells, probably influenced by a different and possibly androgen-independent stroma. Further studies should test the hypothesis that the effect of castration therapy can be enhanced by simultaneous blocking of IGF-1 signaling.
2

Androgen controlled regulatory systems in prostate cancer : potential new therapeutic targets and prognostic markers

Hammarsten, Peter January 2008 (has links)
BACKGROUND: Prostate cancer is by far the most common cancer among Swedish men. Some patients have an aggressive lethal disease, but the majority of affected men have long expected survival. Unfortunately, the diagnostic tools available are insufficient in predicting disease aggressiveness. Novel prognostic markers are therefore urgently needed. Furthermore, metastatic prostate cancer is generally treated with castration, but the long-term effects are insufficient. Additional studies are therefore needed to explore how the effects of this therapy can be enhanced. Prostate growth and regression is beside testosterone controlled by locally produced regulators. Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) are two of the major regulators in the normal prostate and in prostate tumours. MATERIALS AND METHODS: VEGF and EGFR were explored in the prostate, by treating rats with either anti-VEGF or anti-EGFR treatment during castration and testosterone-stimulated prostate growth. Rats with implanted androgen-independent prostate tumours were treated with an inhibitor of both VEGF receptor-2 (VEGFR-2) and EGFR. Stereological techniques, immunohistochemistry, western blotting and quantitative real-time PCR were used to evaluate these experiments. Furthermore, prostate tissue from untreated prostate cancer patients was used to retrospectively explore the expression of phosphorylated-EGFR (pEGFR) in relation to outcome. RESULTS: Anti-VEGF treatment during testosterone-stimulated prostate growth, inhibited vascular and prostate growth. Anti-EGFR treatment during castration and testosterone-stimulated prostate growth resulted in enhanced castration effects and inhibited prostate growth. Anti-vascular treatment of androgen-independent prostate cancer with an inhibitor of VEGFR-2 and EGFR, that targets the normal and tumour vasculature, enhanced the effects of castration. Low immunoreactivity for pEGFR in prostate epithelial cells, both in the tumour and also in the surrounding non-malignant tissue, was associated with good prognosis. CONCLUSIONS: Anti-vascular treatment, with an inhibitor of VEGFR-2 and EGFR, in combination with castration could be an effective way to treat androgen-insensitive prostate tumours. VEGF and EGFR signalling are necessary components in testosterone-stimulated prostate growth. Phosphorylation of EGFR could be a useful prognostic marker for prostate cancer patients. Tumours may affect the surrounding non-malignant tissue and pEGFR immunoreactivity in the morphologically normal prostate tissue can be used to retrieve prognostic information.

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