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Volume 57, Issue 4, Supplement 1, Pages 56-63 (April 2001)


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Prostate cancer prevention agent development: Criteria and pipeline for candidate chemoprevention agents

William G NelsonabcdeCorresponding Author Information, George Wildingf

Abstract 

Epidemiologic data suggest that prostate cancer morbidity and mortality ought to be preventable. New insights into the molecular pathogenesis of prostate cancer offer new opportunities for the discovery of prostate cancer chemoprevention drugs and new challenges for their development. Established pathways that lead to US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval of drugs for advanced prostate cancer may not be appropriate for the development of drugs for prostate cancer chemoprevention. For example, large randomized clinical trials designed to test the efficacy of new chemoprevention drugs on prostate cancer survival in the general population are likely to be conducted at great expense and take many years, threatening to increase commercial development risks while decreasing exclusive marketing revenues. As a consequence, to accelerate progress in research, new validated surrogate and strategic clinical trial endpoints, and new clinical trial designs featuring more precisely defined high-risk clinical trial cohorts, are needed. In this review, 10 criteria for prostate cancer chemoprevention agent development are offered and the pipeline of new prostate cancer chemoprevention drug candidates is considered.

a Department of Oncology, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA

b Department of Urology, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA

c Department of Pathology, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA

d Department of Pharmacology, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA

e Department of Medicine, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA (WGN)

f Department of Medicine, University of Wisconsin Comprehensive Cancer Center, Madison, Wisconsin, USA (GW)

Corresponding Author InformationReprint requests: William G. Nelson, MD, PhD, Marburg 411, The Johns Hopkins Hospital, 600 North Wolfe Street, Baltimore, MD 21287

PII: S0090-4295(00)00942-0


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