[The Hormone Refractory Prostate Cancer - a Challenge for the Internal Specialist]
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Prostate cancer is the second-leading cause of cancer-related death among men and the seventh most common cause of death in the United States overall. As prostatic carcinoma is a slowly growing cancer depending on the tumor burden, use of PSA results in early cancer detection. pT2 tumors can be cured with low morbidity by radical prostatectomy. Five years after operation only few patients will experience further PSA recurrences. Adjuvant radiation therapy is effective in about half of patients with pT3 tumors in case of PSA recurrence. Most prostate cancers are androgen-dependent, meaning that they respond to androgen-ablation therapy. However, these tumors eventually become androgen-independent and grow despite androgen ablation. Since androgens are essential to the survival of prostate cells, a major question is how a prostate cell survives after androgen-ablation therapy. The mechanisms by which a prostate cancer cell survives after androgen-ablation therapy are conflicting. Specific targeting of genes involved in such pathways may further increase the chance of inventing new therapeutic options. So far, chemotherapy with docetaxel has been proved to prolong survival time and minimize cancer induced side effects in patients with hormone refractory prostate cancer.