Original story from Alliance for Clinical Trials in Oncology

A national clinical trial led by the Alliance for Clinical Trials in Oncology has found that oxybutynin, a drug often used to treat overactive bladder symptoms, reduces hot flashes compared to the placebo in men receiving hormone therapy for prostate cancer. 

This primary analysis of Alliance A222001 is published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.

“Oxybutynin demonstrated clear and clinically meaningful improvements in both hot flash frequency and quality of life for men undergoing hormone therapy for prostate cancer,” said Bradley J. Stish, MD, the study’s lead investigator and a radiation oncologist at the Mayo Clinic.

“These results provide strong support for its use as an effective management option for this challenging and often overlooked side effect of prostate cancer treatment.”

Androgen-deprivation therapy (ADT) is an effective treatment against prostate cancer as it lowers male hormones like testosterone needed to fuel cancer cells.

However, ADT causes hot flashes in up to 80% of the men who take it, leading to fatigue, sleep disturbances and reduced quality of life, often leading patients to discontinue ADT due to the side effects.

The Phase II randomized, double‑blind, placebo‑controlled trial evaluated whether two doses of oxybutynin (2.5 mg twice daily and 5 mg twice daily) could improve hot flash symptoms compared with placebo over 6 weeks.

The study enrolled 88 men from 15 academic and community cancer centers; 81 participants were eligible for final analysis. The average age of the participants was 68.5.

In this trial, both doses of oxybutynin substantially improved hot flash symptoms compared to the placebo over the 6‑week treatment period.

Men receiving placebo experienced an average reduction of 2.15 hot flashes per day and a 4.85‑point drop in daily hot flash severity scores, whereas those taking 2.5 mg of oxybutynin twice daily reported reductions of 4.77 hot flashes per day and a 9.94‑point decrease in severity, and those receiving 5 mg twice daily experienced the largest improvements, with 6.89 fewer hot flashes per day and a 13.95‑point reduction in severity.

Improvements occurred quickly, often during the first week of treatment, and were sustained throughout the study.

The proportion of patients achieving at least a 50% reduction in hot flash scores was also markedly higher with oxybutynin: 57% in the 2.5 mg group and 79% in the 5 mg group, compared with 32% taking placebo.

Treatment was well tolerated overall. Dry mouth was the most common side effect reported.

“These results are incredibly encouraging,” added Dr. Stish. “Men with hot flashes from hormone therapy now have another therapeutic option available to help reduce their symptom burden. Future research will look to further our understanding of hot flash therapy options in this patient population.”

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