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. 2013 Jul-Aug;6(6):307–316.

Table 2.

Distribution of Therapies for Metastatic Castration-Resistant Prostate Cancer

Data set 1 (N = 2593) Data set 2 (N = 626)
Therapy First treatment, N (%) All treatments, N (%) First treatment, N (%) All treatments, N (%)
Chemotherapy 926 (35.7) 1345 (51.9) 198 (31.6) 309 (49.4)
  Docetaxel 653 (25.2) 1067 (41.1) 127 (20.3) 235 (37.5)
  Carboplatin 52 (2.0) 146 (5.6) 14 (2.2) 41 (6.5)
  Estramustine 31 (1.2) 107 (4.1) 9 (1.4) 24 (3.8)
  Mitoxantrone 28 (1.1) 262 (10.1) 7 (1.1) 43 (6.9)
  Cyclophosphamide 23 (0.9) 96 (3.7) 6 (1.0) 15 (2.4)
Secondary hormonal therapy 1340 (51.7) 1496 (57.7) 350 (55.9) 391 (62.5)
  Antiandrogena 1060 (40.9) 1193 (46.0) 288 (46.0) 319 (51.0)
  Bicalutamide 961 (37.1) 1076 (41.5) 255 (40.7) 282 (45.0)
  Flutamide 48 (1.9) 88 (3.4) 17 (2.7) 25 (4.0)
  Nilutamide 51 (2.0) 124 (4.8) 16 (2.6) 32 (5.1)
 Adrenal androgen blocker 261 (10.1) 507 (19.6) 60 (9.6) 119 (19.0)
  Ketoconazole 259 (10.0) 506 (19.5) 60 (9.6) 119 (19.0)
  Aminoglutethimide 2 (0.1) 3 (0.1) 0 (0.0) 0 (0.0)
 Estrogens 19 (0.7) 53 (2.0) 2 (0.3) 8 (1.3)
  Diethylstilbestrol 3 (0.1) 13 (0.5) 0 (0.0) 0 (0.0)
  Conjugated estrogens 5 (0.2) 10 (0.4) 1 (0.2) 4 (0.6)
  Other estrogens 11 (0.4) 30 (1.2) 1 (0.2) 4 (0.6)
None of the above 327 (12.6) 327 (12.6) 78 (12.5) 78 (12.5)
a

Antiandrogens initiated within 90 days before or after the initiation of luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone were not considered as a castration-resistant prostate cancer therapy.