In an open, prospective clinical trial enrolling 205 patients, efficacy and safety of the gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist leuprorelin acetate depot (LAD) in the treatment of patients with advanced prostatic carcinoma were assessed. 3.75 mg of the LAD formulation was injected subcutaneously in monthly intervals. The primary objective of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of the analogue in producing and maintaining castration levels of testosterone over a > 3-year follow-up period and to determine its safety profile. Median pretreatment serum testosterone levels fell from 350 to 21 ng/dl after 4 weeks and 20 ng/dl after 45 months. The long-term clinical efficacy of the LAD formulation can be expressed by best treatment response over time. These respective figures read as follows: 10.7% complete response; 49.8% partial response; 34.1% no change; 1.5% progression, and 3.9% no data available. The median time to progression was 12(15 ± 11) months. Median survival time calculated by Kaplan-Meier exceeded 42.5 months for patients on monotherapy and 30.9 months for those on combination therapy. Hot flushes which were related to androgen deprivation were the most common side effects. Patients and treating physicians judged tolerability of LAD in more than 90% as good. Androgen deprivation remains the mainstay of hormone-dependent advanced carcinoma of the prostate. Up to now, surgical castration has been considered the standard method. LAD is an advantage in the endocrine treatment of advanced prostatic carcinoma and is a good alternative to castration.

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