Conference Coverage

Statin effect in prostate cancer may be caused by reduced inflammation


 

REPORTING FROM THE AUA ANNUAL MEETING


There was no association between lethality and ERG-positive or ERG-negative status. Those who used statins for more than 5 years were less likely to have a PTEN-null tumor (hazard ratio, 0.42; 95% confidence interval, 0.20-0.90) but not more likely to have a PTEN-positive tumor (HR, 1.18; 95% CI, 0.95-1.46).

Compared with never users, long-term statin users also were less likely to have advanced prostate cancer (multivariate analysis, HR, 0.62; 95% CI, 0.45-0.85) as well as lethal prostate cancer (HR, 0.52; 95% CI, 0.35-0.78).

The researchers conducted a gene set enrichment analysis in statin users and found an enrichment of T-cell, B-cell, and PI3K signaling in tumor-adjacent normal prostate tissue, as well as other changes. “We think maybe there’s a microenvironment inflammation component to the mechanism through which statins are associated with lower risk of lethal prostate cancer,” said Dr. Allott.

The molecular data could identify patient subgroups that could benefit from statins. Dr. Allott said that is the goal, but it will take time. “That’s more obviously translatable to the clinic, but we don’t yet have enough data in this cohort to look at that.”

SOURCE: Allott E et al. AUA 2018, Abstract MP21-01.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Abstract: Divergent Responses to Mammography and Prostate-Specific Antigen Recommendations
MDedge Family Medicine
VIDEO: Few transgender patients desire care in a transgender-only clinic
MDedge Family Medicine
USPSTF advises against widespread prostate cancer screening
MDedge Family Medicine
MDedge Daily News: Prostate screening should be by request
MDedge Family Medicine
History of posttraumatic stress disorder • priapism • Dx?
MDedge Family Medicine
Painless penile ulcer and tender inguinal lymphadenopathy
MDedge Family Medicine
Testosterone therapy tied to kidney stone risk
MDedge Family Medicine
USPSTF takes another stab at PSA screening recs
MDedge Family Medicine
Phototherapy has lasting benefit in low-risk prostate cancer
MDedge Family Medicine
Prostate cancer risk before age 55 higher for black men
MDedge Family Medicine