Picture

Northwestern Medicine
​Breakthroughs for Physicians

​​
  • Home
  • Specialties
    • Cardiovascular >
      • Research
      • Clinical Breakthroughs
      • News
    • Endocrinology >
      • Clinical Breakthroughs In Endocrinology
      • Research In Endocrinology
      • News
    • ENT (Otolaryngology) >
      • Clinical Breakthroughs
      • Research
      • News
    • Gastroenterology >
      • Clinical Breakthroughs
      • Research
      • News
    • Geriatrics >
      • Clinical Breakthroughs
      • Research
      • News
    • Neurosciences >
      • Rare and Complex Brain Tumors
      • Research
      • COVID-19 and Neurosciences
      • News
      • Clinical Breakthroughs
    • OB-GYN >
      • Clinical Breakthroughs
      • Research
      • News
    • Oncology >
      • Clinical Breakthroughs
      • Research
      • News
    • Ophthalmology >
      • Clinical Breakthroughs
      • Research
      • News
    • Organ Transplant >
      • Clinical Breakthroughs
      • Research
      • News
    • Orthopaedics >
      • Clinical Breakthroughs
      • Research
      • News
    • Psychiatry >
      • Clinical Breakthroughs
      • Research
      • News
    • Pulmonary >
      • Clinical Breakthroughs
      • Research
      • News
    • Rehabilitation >
      • Clinical Breakthroughs
      • News
    • Rheumatology >
      • Clinical Breakthroughs
      • Research
      • News
    • Urology >
      • Clinical Breakthroughs
      • Research
      • News
  • CME
  • REFERRALS
    • Refer to NM Cardiovascular
    • Refer to NM Neurosciences
    • Refer to Other Specialties

< BACK TO CLINICAL BREAKTHROUGHS IN ONCOLOGY

December 2023

ONCOLOGY

DRUG EXTENDS SURVIVAL IN PROSTATE CANCER WITH GENETIC MUTATIONS

Featuring: Maha Hussain, MD
​
​Men with hormone-resistant prostate cancer and specific genetic mutations who were treated with the PARP inhibitor drug olaparib survived longer than men treated with traditional hormone therapy, according to an analysis published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.  

Maha Hussain, MD, the Genevieve E. Teuton Professor of Medicine in the Division of Hematology and Oncology and deputy director of the Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center of Northwestern University, was senior author of the study.  

An estimated one in eight men will be diagnosed with prostate cancer during their lifetime, according to the American Cancer Society, and an estimated 280,000 new cases will be diagnosed in 2023. The average survival rate for men who develop hormone-resistant prostate cancer is about three years, and more effective treatment strategies are needed.  

The cancer is normally treated with chemotherapy and other hormonal and non-hormonal agents, including PARP inhibitor drugs, which block the PARP protein from normally repairing healthy and cancer cells, causing the cancer cells to die.  

​In the previous phase III PROfound clinical trial, in which Hussain was one of the two international leaders for the trial, men with metastatic, hormone-resistant prostate cancer who had a specific genetic alteration and who were treated with the PARP inhibitor drug olaparib survived longer than men treated with traditional hormone treatments.  

An estimated 20 percent of men with metastatic, hormone-resistant prostate cancer have alterations in genes associated with more aggressive disease and poorer outcomes, including BRCA1, BRAC2 and ATM.  

Olaparib is currently used to treat breast, ovarian and pancreatic cancer, and in the 2020 trial, the drug showed efficacy in treating hormone-resistant prostate cancers with an inability to repair damaged DNA and whose disease had progressed after multiple prior treatments, leading to the drug’s FDA approval for treating metastatic, hormone-resistant prostate cancer.   
​
In current post hoc analysis, the investigators examined survival rates in phase III PROfound trial participants specifically with BRCA mutations whose disease had progressed and who had previously received prior therapies including taxane chemotherapy. In the trial, these patients were randomized to receive olaparib monotherapy or traditional hormone treatments (abiraterone or enzalutamide).  

​Overall, the average progression-free survival was 9.8 months for the olaparib group versus 3 months in the control group. Notably, men with BRCA2-only mutations demonstrated prolonged positive responses to olaparib treatment with an average progression-free survival rate of 10.8 months compared to 3.5 months in the control group.  

Overall survival was also greater in the olaparib group (20.1 months) compared to the control group (14.4 months). These findings further reinforce the use of PARP inhibitors in this patient population, according to the authors.  

“Our analysis suggests that there is superior clinical benefit with olaparib versus control both in patients who had and had not received previous taxane treatment,” Hussain said.  
This work was supported by AstraZeneca and is part of an alliance between AstraZeneca and Merck Sharp & Dohme LLC, a subsidiary of Merck & Co, Inc. 
​​
​This article was originally published in the Feinberg School of Medicine News Center on December 6, 2023. 
Maha Hussain, MD headshot
Maha Hussain, MD, the Genevieve E. Teuton Professor of Medicine in the Division of Hematology and Oncology and deputy director of the Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center of Northwestern University, was senior author of the study published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology. 

Refer a Patient

Northwestern Medicine welcomes the opportunity to partner with you in caring for your patients. 
Call 844.344.6663
Find an NM oncologist

You May Also Like

brain scan images

December 2022

ONCOLOGY
Bin Zhang, MD, PHD, Named Co-leader Of Tumor Environment And Metastasis Program
Two physicians reviewing brain scan

September 2022

ONCOLOGY
NIH Initiative To Systematically Investigate And Establish Function Of Every Human Gene
Headshot of Yara Mikhaeil-Demo, MD

October 2022

ONCOLOGY
Newly Identified Protein Drives Breast Cancer Stemness And Metastasis

Northwestern Medicine Breakthroughs for Physicians

About Us     Terms of Use     Privacy Policy     How to Vote for U.S. News & World Report Best Hospitals
© 2025 Northwestern Medicine® and Northwestern Memorial HealthCare. 
Northwestern Medicine® is a trademark of Northwestern Memorial HealthCare, used by Northwestern University
Connect with us
[email protected]
International physicians, contact [email protected]
  • Home
  • Specialties
    • Cardiovascular >
      • Research
      • Clinical Breakthroughs
      • News
    • Endocrinology >
      • Clinical Breakthroughs In Endocrinology
      • Research In Endocrinology
      • News
    • ENT (Otolaryngology) >
      • Clinical Breakthroughs
      • Research
      • News
    • Gastroenterology >
      • Clinical Breakthroughs
      • Research
      • News
    • Geriatrics >
      • Clinical Breakthroughs
      • Research
      • News
    • Neurosciences >
      • Rare and Complex Brain Tumors
      • Research
      • COVID-19 and Neurosciences
      • News
      • Clinical Breakthroughs
    • OB-GYN >
      • Clinical Breakthroughs
      • Research
      • News
    • Oncology >
      • Clinical Breakthroughs
      • Research
      • News
    • Ophthalmology >
      • Clinical Breakthroughs
      • Research
      • News
    • Organ Transplant >
      • Clinical Breakthroughs
      • Research
      • News
    • Orthopaedics >
      • Clinical Breakthroughs
      • Research
      • News
    • Psychiatry >
      • Clinical Breakthroughs
      • Research
      • News
    • Pulmonary >
      • Clinical Breakthroughs
      • Research
      • News
    • Rehabilitation >
      • Clinical Breakthroughs
      • News
    • Rheumatology >
      • Clinical Breakthroughs
      • Research
      • News
    • Urology >
      • Clinical Breakthroughs
      • Research
      • News
  • CME
  • REFERRALS
    • Refer to NM Cardiovascular
    • Refer to NM Neurosciences
    • Refer to Other Specialties