Caring4Prostate
Testosterone is
Only Part of the Picture
Some years back, a handful of men called or wrote to tell me
of their experience with progesterone, usually the rexult of
handling progesterone cream while helping a woman apply it.
They reported that their symptoms of prostate enlargement or
benign prostatichypertrophy (BPH) such as urinary urgency
and frequency decreased considerably, and their sexual
performance increased. Needles to say, this gave me much to
think about.
Since then, several men with prostate cancer have told me
their PSA (Prostate Specific Antigen) level, an indication
of prostate cancer, decreased when they started using a
daily dab of progesterone cream, and that they have had no
progression of their prostate lesions since using the cream.
One man called to say his bone metastasises are now no
longer visible by Mayo Clinic X-ray tests.
Though I retired from active practice ten years ago, six of
my fat-met patients with early prostate cancer have been
using progesterone cream (along with diet, some vitamin and
mineral supplements, and saw palmetto) for about five years.
All report their cancer has shown no progression.
The Wrong Treatment All These Years
Since Huggins showed, in 1941, that castration (removal of
the testicles) slowed progression of prostate cancer,
physicians have assumed it was the resulting lack of
testosterone that slowed the cancer, and ever since have
relied on suppression of testosterone in their treatment of
the disease. However, the testosterone suppression benefit
only lasts two to three years, and then the prostate cancer
progression to an androgen (male hormone) insensitive state
and continues to spread. Despite this metastatic prostate
cancer patients are treated with androgen blockade through
castration (orcheictomy) and/or hormone suppressing drugs.
I remember reading studies done 30 to 40 years ago showing
that testosterone supplementation prevented survival of
prostate cancer celss transplated to test mammals. In more
recent (as yet unpublished) studies it has been shown that
in a prostate cancer cell culture, testosterone kills the
cancer cells. A 1996 study published in the Proceedings of
the National Academy of Sciences showed that in mice,
testosterone will shrink human prostate tumors.
Tracking the Culprit
Why does prostate cancer occur so often in aging men?
Consider the changes in testicular hormone production as men
age:
1) Testosterone levels fall;
2) More testosterone is changed (by 5-alpha-reductase
enzyme) to dihydrotestosterone (DHT), stimulating prostate
growth;
3) Progesterone levels fall. Progesterone is vital to good
health in men. It is the primary precursor of our adrenal
cortical hormones and testosterone. Men sythesize
progesterone in smaller amounts than women do but it is
still vital. Since progesterone is a potent inhibitor of
5-alpha-reductase, the decline of progesterone in aging
males play a roll in increasing the conversion rate of
testosterone to DHT.
4) Estradiol (an estrogen) effect increases Testosterone is
a direct antagonist of estradiol both the fall in
Testosterone and the shift from testosterone to DHT allows
increased effect of estradiol. Male estradiol levels are
equivalent to or greater than that of postmenopausal
females, but normally estradiols effects are suppressed
(antagonized) by the male's greater production of
testosterone. Perhaps estradiol is also the culprit (along
with DHT) in prostate growth.
Getting Down to the Gene Level
Embryology teaches us that the prostate is the male
equivalent of the female uterus. The two organs
differentiate from the same embryonic cells and they share
many of the same genes such as the oncogene, Bel-2 and the
cancer-protector gene, p53. It is not surprising then, that
the hormonal relationships in endometiral cancer will be the
same in prostate cancer; that is both are very sensitive to
the harmful effects of unopposed estrogen and are protected
by progesterone. Researchers, T. S. Wiley and Brent Formby
Ph.D., have done test tube studies that verify this
relationship; but, human studies still need to be done.
The course of prostate cancer growth, like breast cancer
growth, is not due to a linear progression of cancer cells
multiplying from one rogue cell; it is due to the continued
presence of an underlying metabolic imbalance. The
underlying metabolic imbalance in all hormone-dependant
cancers is estrogen dominance. Prevent the estrogen
dominance and you will prevent the cancer. If the cancer is
already underway, correcting the estrogen dominance will
slow the cancer growth and prolong life. The benefit of
castration in prostate cancer stemmed from estradiol
reduction, not testosterone reduction. Given the choice, I
would choose testosterone and progesterone supplementation
over castration.
Excerpt from the former The John R. Lee, M.D. Medical Letter
(January, 1999 issue)
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