Albert Segaoff, M.D., Douglas Gordon. M.D., Benjamin N. Howitt, PH.D., Joseph V. Schlosser, M.D., and Paul J. Murison, M.D.
From the Department of Medicine, Tulane University School of Medicine, the Alton Ochsner Medical Foundation, and Chanty Hospital of Louisiana, New Orleans, Louisiana.
This investigation was supported hy research grants from the National Cancer Institute of the National Institutes of Health. United States Public Health Service, American Cancer Society, Inc., and The Damon Runyon Memorial Lund.
The authors wish to express their thanks to Ciba Pharmaceutical Products, Inc., Summit, New Jersey, which supplied, through the courtesy of Mr. Ered Houghton, die testosterone propionate, in part with material set aside for tile Committee on Research of the Council on Pharmacy anti Chemistry of the American Medical Association, under schedule “C” of the Subcommittee on Steroids and Cancer.
It now appears well established that testosterone propionate has limited therapeutic effectiveness in patients with advanced mammary carcinoma.1,8 However, we are aware of only a few reports in which the effect of this therapy upon hormone excretion was studied. Hamburger and Kaae followed the 17-kelosieroid excretion in patients being treated for advanced mammary cancer with testosterone in various doses and by varying routes of administration. Taylor, Mecke, and Twombly gave testosterone propionate to a normal control and to a patient with cancer of the breast recently operated upon and followed their estrogen and androgen excretion. In the present study, an attempt was made to evaluate the effect of testosterone propionate therapy on hormone-excretion patterns, and, if possible, to correlate the effects with the clinical course.
Materials and methods
All patients under study received 100 mg. of testosterone propionate in vegetable oil either three times weekly or every other day.
Occasionally, a patient was unable to return for additional medication at the proper time so that therapy was interrupted for a week or ten days. In the majority of patients, during collection of urine for hormone studies, testos terone propionate was administered as 50 mg. daily in order to eliminate peaks and valleys that might be produced by therapy on alternate days.
In addition to clinical studies, roentgenograms were made before initiation of therapy and at approximately monthly intervals during therapy. Photographs and caliper measurements of accessible lesions were made both before and during therapy. In a few instances, serial biopsies were obtained. These observations were the means for determining objective changes.
An attempt was made to evaluate hormonal patterns before and during therapy. Urinary excretion of 17-ket.osteroitls, gonad-stimulating hormones, lactogenic hormone (prolactin), glycogenic corticoids, and urinary creatinecreatinine ratios were measured.
The 17-ketostcroid values were determined on the total neutral fraction by the Zimmerman reaction with aqueous sodium hydroxide, dehydroisoandrostcrone being used as a standard. Gonad-stimulatinghormone excretion was measured by the mouse-uterine weight method of Klinefelter, Albright, and Griswold; the (hailed value represented the highest positive value obtained. Urinary excretion of prolactin was assessed by I lie pigeon-crop method of Goppedge and Segalolf. Venning, Kazmin, and Bell’s method for glycogenic corticoids was used. Because of variations with different batches of mice, urinary extracts prepared from the urine of the same patient before and during therapy were kept in the dry state in the refrigerator and assayed simultaneously. Only these simultaneously assayed glycogenic corticoids are included in the final averages, although the other values are presented for completeness. Creatinine and creatine were measured by the alkaline picric add reaction. Creatine was converted to creatinine by acid hydrolysis.
Forty-eight patients were treated with testosterone propionate. Their ages ranged from 26 to 75 years, with thirty-five more than 40 years of age. The majority had known of the presence of the tumor less than five years, although this period also varied considerably from less than one year to nineteen years. All but two patients had received surgical therapy, irradiation, or both, to the initial lesion. Prior to admission to the study, almost all patients had undergone the menopause either normally or by surgical or roentgenological castration. In instances in which castration produced regression in the metastatic lesions, treatment with testosterone propionate was initiated only after evidence of renewed progression of the metastases was found.
Patients were followed whether they had skeletal metastases, soft-tissue lesions, or both. In nearly all patients, testosterone propionate was the first steroid therapy administered. Three patients who had received other therapeutic agents while taking testosterone propionate and were considered unsuitable for evaluation are included in the final summary (Table 1) but have been omitted from Table 2. In all except two patients, administration of testosterone propionate was continued until there was unequivocal evidence of progression of the disease. These two patients, in whom there was definite regression of the lesions and who discontinued therapy against advice, were subsequently given an additional course of testosterone propionate when they returned with further growth of the lesions. All patients were treated for at least one month; the total duration of therapy varied from one month to more than one year.
Table 1. Objective response to testosterone propionate in forty-eight patients with cancer of the breast
Results
Thirteen of the forty-eight patients, or 27 per cent, showed objective regression of the lesions. The few patients who showed evidences of both progression and regression were classified as showing progression (Table 1). The duration of regression extended over an average period of 31.3 weeks, the longest being fifty weeks. It is interesting that in none of the ten patients less than 40 years old was a good response obtained, whereas a third of those more than 40 years old showed improvement. The length of time the tumor was present prior to testosterone therapy was approximately the same for the group showing progression as for those who showed improvement. No correlation was noted between the type of menopause experienced and the therapeutic result obtained, except that the patients who were still menstruating gave uniformly poor results. The response of the patients according to the site of the lesion is shown in Table 2.
Table 2. Objective response to testosterone according to type of lesion
Tables 3 and 4 contain excretion data on the patients before and during therapy. Studies during treatment were all done after at least one month of therapy. Only data on patients in whom studies were obtained both before and during treatment are included in this presentation. In these tables, the averages are also expressed as percentage change from the initial value obtained before therapy. As expected, there was an increase in the 17-ketosteroid excretion as well as a decrease in the urinary gonad-stimulating-hormone excretion. In general, there was an increase in lactogenic hormone. These changes could not be correlated with the presence or absence of objective improvement. There was a decrease in the urinary glycogenic corticoids in the group that showed objective improvement, whereas there was an increase in the groups that did not show improvement. However, it is doubtful whether this difference is significant. The greatest difference was noted in urinary creatine excretion, which decreased in the patients who improved and increased in those who failed to improve. This difference is more uniform and more striking when expressed as the creatine-creatinine ratio.
Table 3. Urinary excretions before and during testosterone therapy in patients with carcinoma of the breast showing objective improvement*
Discussion
Early in this study it appeared that administration of testosterone propionate was leading to an increase in urinary excretion of glycogenic corticoids. These early assays (marked *) are shown in Tables 3 and 4 but were not included in the averages. However, realizing the importance of the animal factor, we began breeding our own assay mice as well as running the specimens before and during therapy in the same batch of mice at the same time. The great differences apparent in the early studies then disappeared. It is doubtful that the differences observed with these more stringent methods for assay of glycogenic corticoids are of any significance. It is to be recalled that administration of testosterone has been shown to decrease urinary glycogenic corticoids.10
Table 4. Urinary excretions before and during testosterone therapy in patients with carcinoma of the breast showing no objective improvement *
Our original studies in the development of a method for the assay of urinary prolactin were undertaken because of our belief that prolactin might be involved in the development of mammary carcinoma. This is particularly borne out by the preponderance of nulliparous women in the present study (twelve of twenty-eight in whom information was obtained). This is merely confirmation of the observations of others.’'’ However, it does appear that there is neither consistent change in urinary prolactin observed in women with cancel' of the breast, nor any distinct pattern of response of urinary prolactin to various types of hormonal therapy. We are now surveying various pathological entities and increasing our normal reference group so that the possible significance of these studies can be assessed. Nonetheless, it is of interest to note that there has been a definite trend toward increase of urinary prolactin excretion during testosterone propionate therapy in both the improved and unimproved groups.
The rise in 17-keiosteroid excretion observed in both groups was, of course, to be expected following the administration of testosterone propionate. The mean rise for both groups represents somewhat less than 20 per cent of the original steroid administered (calculated as free testosterone). The amount of increase in each patient varied from essentially nothing to 22.5 mg. per twenty-four hours. The latter figure represents a total recovery of 54 per cent in that patient. These are the expected results, and here again, it is particularly noteworthy that there is no substantial difference between the patients responding well and those not responding at all. The one patient (case 6) who failed to show an increase was seen early in the study and was treated with 100 mg. three times weekly during the collection, and these I7-ketosteroid values are each only from a single determination.
The results with urinary gonad-stimulating hormone are equally interesting despite the well-known difficulties of lowering the urinary titer of gonad-stimulating hormones with more modest amounts of testosterone.8 The dosage administered here uniformly produced a decrease in the urinary excretion of gonadstimulating hormone, which again was unrelated to the patient's therapeutic response. However, the initial values obtained are of great interest in that the patients’ ages and endocrine status were such that extremely high titers of urinary gonad-stimulating hormone were expected. This was not at all true. It is our opinion that the cachexia resulting from the extensive disease in these patients produced an effect similar to that seen in the "pseudohypophysectomy” of starvation; i.e., the cachexia induced a sort of physiological hypophysectomy with respect to gonad-stimulating hormone. That this was not a complete type of pseudohypophysectomy is borne out by the lack of correlation between our usually measured gonad-stimulating hormones and the titer of lactogenic hormone, which is thought to be the third gonadotropic hormone or luteotropin.
Seven patients (cases 4, 15, 18, 22, 27, 36, and 50) showed this initial “pseudohypophysectomy.” The majority of these (six of the seven) fell in the group who failed to respond favorably to therapy. Two of these (cases 4 and 18) were in poor shape, were too young for spontaneous menopause, and had menstruated at least fairly regularly up to a few months before initiation of therapy. However, even if these are eliminated, there are still four patients (cases 22, 27, 36, and 50) in the unimproved group who manifested this phenomenon. It is of interest that in two (cases 4 and 18) of the patients, the low gonadstimulating-hormone excretion was accompanied by a low l7-ketosteroid value but not by a low prolactin value.
The fairly uniform finding of creatinuria in patients in both groups is a reflection of the destruction of body protoplasm by the invading neoplasm. The failure of the creatinuria to decrease in the unresponsive patients probably reflects further destruction of body tissues, whereas the striking decrease in creatinuria observed in patients showing a good therapeutic response is a reflection of the reparative tissue processes as well as a decrease in the destructiveness of the neoplasm. The slightly increased creatinine excretion in the improving patients is probably a reflection of ibe increased mass of general body protoplasm occurring while the tumor regresses.
A brief word of explanation is necessary regarding the greater percentage of repeat assays done in patients giving good responses as opposed to the lesser number done in those who showed progression while receiving therapy. This happened because the better condition of the improving patients made it possible for them to return and repeat urine collections. Many of the patients who failed to show improvement either died or were in such poor condition as to preclude repeated urine collections.
Summary
Forty-eight patients with advanced mammary carcinoma were treated with testosterone propionate. In thirteen of these, there was objective regression in the lesions, and in the others either progression or no change.
All patients showed the expected increase in 17-ketosteroid excretion as well as the expected decrease in gonad-stimulating-hormone excretion. In the patients who showed improvement, there was a decrease of doubtful significance in urinary corticoids, and conversely an increase in corticoids in the patients who did not show improvement. Prolactin excretion for both groups of patients increased.
In general, the patients who improved showed a decrease in urinary creatine, whereas those who failed to improve showed an average increase in urinary creatine.
Many patients initially showed a lower urinary gonad-stimulating-hormone value than expected from their age and endocrine status. The significance of this is discussed.
References
Adair, F. E.; Mellors, R. C.; Farrow, J. H.; Woodard, H. Q,; Escher, G. C., and Urban, J. A.: The use of estrogens and androgens in advanced mammary cancer; clinical and laboratory study of one hundred and five female patients. J.A.M.A. 140: 1193-1200, 1919.
Coppedce, R. L., and Secaloff, A.: Urinary prolactin excretion in man. J. Clin. Endocrinol. (In press.)
Hamburger, C. And Kaae, S.: Testosterone treatment and 17-ketosteroid excretion; investigations on the influence of the mode of administration upon the absorption and excretion of testosterone propionate. Acta endocrinol. 2: 257-286, 1949.
Klinefelter, H. F., Jr.; Albright, F. and Griswold, G. C.: Experience with a quantitative test for normal or decreased amounts of follicle stimulating hormone in the urine in endocrinological diagnosis. F. Clin. Endocrinol. 3: 529-544, 1943.
S. Lanf.-Claypon, J. E.: A Further Report on Cancer of the Breast; with Special Reference to Its Associated Antecedent Conditions. Ministry of Health, Reports on Public Health and Medical Subjects, No. 32. London. His Majesty’s Stat. Off. 1926.
Mccullagii, E. P.: Sex hormone deficiencies—some clinical considerations. Recent Progr. Hormone Research 2: 295-344, 1948.
Mulinos, M. G. and Pomerantz, L.: Pseudohypophysectomy; condition resembling hypophysectomy produced by malnutrition. J. Nutrition 19: 493-504, 1940.
Nathanson, I. T.: Endocrine aspects of human cancer. Recent Progr. Hormone Research 1: 261-291, 1947.
Taylor, H. C., Jr.; Mecke, F. E., and Twombly, G. H.: Estrogen and 17-ketosteroid excretion in patients with breast carcinoma. Cancer Research 3: 180-192, 1943.
Venning, E. H., and Browne, J. S. L.: Effect of testosterone on the excretion of glycogenic corticoids. F. Clin. Endocrinol. 7: 729-740, 1947.
Venning, E. H.; Kazmin, V. E. and Bell, J. C.: Biological assay of adrenal corticoids. Endocrinology 38: 79-89, 1946.