Androgen deprivation followed by acute androgen stimulation selectively sensitizes AR-positive prostate cancer cells to ionizing radiation

M Hedayati, MC Haffner, JB Coulter, RR Raval… - Clinical Cancer …, 2016 - AACR
M Hedayati, MC Haffner, JB Coulter, RR Raval, Y Zhang, H Zhou, O Mian, EJ Knight…
Clinical Cancer Research, 2016AACR
Purpose: The current standard of care for patients with locally advanced prostate cancer is a
combination of androgen deprivation and radiation therapy. Radiation is typically given with
androgen suppression when testosterone levels are at their nadir. Recent reports have
shown that androgen stimulation of androgen-deprived prostate cancer cells leads to
formation of double-strand breaks (DSB). Here, we exploit this finding and investigate the
extent and timing of androgen-induced DSBs and their effect on tumor growth following …
Abstract
Purpose: The current standard of care for patients with locally advanced prostate cancer is a combination of androgen deprivation and radiation therapy. Radiation is typically given with androgen suppression when testosterone levels are at their nadir. Recent reports have shown that androgen stimulation of androgen-deprived prostate cancer cells leads to formation of double-strand breaks (DSB). Here, we exploit this finding and investigate the extent and timing of androgen-induced DSBs and their effect on tumor growth following androgen stimulation in combination with ionizing radiation (IR).
Experimental Design: Androgen-induced DNA damage was assessed by comet assays and γH2A.X foci formation. Effects of androgen stimulation and radiation were determined in vitro and in vivo with xenograft models.
Results: We document that androgen treatment of androgen-deprived prostate cancer cell lines resulted in a dose- and time-dependent induction of widespread DSBs. Generation of these breaks was dependent on androgen receptor and topoisomerase II beta but not on cell-cycle progression. In vitro models demonstrated a synergistic interaction between IR and androgen stimulation when IR is given at a time point corresponding with high levels of androgen-induced DSB formation. Furthermore, in vivo studies showed a significant improvement in tumor growth delay when radiation was given shortly after androgen repletion in castrated mice.
Conclusions: These results suggest a potential cooperative effect and improved tumor growth delay with androgen-induced DSBs and radiation with implications for improving the therapeutic index of prostate cancer radiation therapy. Clin Cancer Res; 22(13); 3310–9. ©2016 AACR.
See related commentary by Chua and Bristow, p. 3124
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