Abstract
To assess whether pretreatment prostatic androgen receptor measurements would be of value in predicting the response to hormonal therapy in patients with prostatic cancer, 23 men with metastatic carcinoma of the prostate underwent prostatic biopsy before treatment. Cytosolic and nuclear prostatic androgen receptor contents were measured by a single saturating dose, dextran-charcoal assay. All patients had measurable levels of androgen receptor in prostatic tissue and all demonstrated objective evidence of improvement following hormonal therapy. If androgen receptor measurements are to be useful in predicting prognosis correlations between quantitative levels of receptor and quantitative aspects of response must be established. Response was quantitated by measuring the duration of response and survival following hormonal treatment. The strong correlation between duration of response and survival (P < 0.01) demonstrated herein suggests that survival in these patients is related directly to the duration of time patients respond to hormonal therapy. Neither total cellular nor cytosolic androgen receptor content correlated with response. Nuclear androgen receptor content correlated with the duration of response and survival following hormonal treatment. (P < 0.05). In patients with nuclear receptor levels < 110 fmol/mg DNA the duration of response (7.1 .+-. 3.8 mo.) and survival (14.4 .+-. 5.9 mo.) was significantly shorter than in patients with higher levels of nuclear receptor (17.3 .+-. 10.4 and 24.7 .+-. 8.8 mo., respectively) (P < 0.05). These findings form the 1st report of a correlation between nuclear androgen receptor content and hormonal responsiveness. Apparently, measurements of nuclear receptor may aid in identitying those patients unlikely to obtain a prolonged response from hormonal therapy.