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Sermorelin

GHRH (1-29), GRF 1-29 NH2, Sermorelin acetate

Quick Stats
Studies 223
Trials 41
Score 1
2005 pubmed

Inhibitory effect of antagonists of bombesin and growth hormone-releasing hormone on orthotopic and intraosseous growth and invasiveness of PC-3 human prostate cancer in nude mice.

Stangelberger. Anton A; Schally. Andrew V AV; Varga. Jozsef L JL; Zarandi. Marta M; Szepeshazi. Karoly K; Armatis. Patricia P; Halmos. Gabor G

Key Findings

  • GHRH antagonist MZ-J-7-118 and bombesin antagonist RC-3940‑II each reduced prostate tumor growth in mice
  • The combination of both antagonists gave the strongest effect, cutting tumor size by up to 86% and lowering metastasis
  • Both antagonists also lessened bone damage and fractures in tumors growing inside bone

Practical Outcomes

  • The findings don’t translate into a usable sermorelin protocol for longevity or performance. They mainly highlight that blocking GHRH can hinder certain cancers, suggesting caution but no direct action for those taking GHRH‑activating peptides.

Summary

This study tested drugs that block growth‑hormone‑releasing hormone (GHRH) and bombesin signals in mice with aggressive prostate cancer. The blockers slowed tumor growth, especially when used together, and reduced spread to bone and other organs. However, the compounds are antagonists (they block the hormone), not sermorelin, which is a GHRH‑activating peptide, so the results don’t give direct guidance for using sermorelin.

Abstract

To determine whether antagonists of growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) and bombesin/gastrin-releasing peptide (BN/GRP) can inhibit the orthotopic and metastatic growth of PC-3 human androgen-independent prostate cancers. The effects of administration of GHRH antagonist MZ-J-7-118, BN/GRP antagonist RC-3940-II, and their combination on the growth and metastatic spread of PC-3 tumors implanted orthotopically into nude mice were evaluated. The efficacy of this treatment on PC-3 tumors implanted intratibially and s.c. was also determined. Treatment with MZ-J-7-118, RC-3940-II, or their combination significantly inhibited the growth of PC-3 tumors implanted orthotopically, intraosseously, and s.c. The combination of the two antagonists had the greatest effect, inhibiting orthotopic tumor growth by 77%, intratibially implanted tumors by 86%, and s.c. tumors by 86%. The therapy with BN/GRP and GHRH antagonists, especially in combination, also reduced the local tumor spread and distant metastases in animals bearing orthotopic tumors. Combination therapy was likewise the most effective in reducing the incidence and severity of tibial osteolytic lesions and pathologic fractures in intraosseously implanted tumors. High-affinity binding sites for BN/GRP and GHRH were found in s.c. and orthotopic PC-3 tumor samples. MZ-J-7-118, RC-3940-II, and the combination of both compounds inhibited in vitro growth of PC-3 cells. Our findings show the efficacy of BN/GRP antagonists and GHRH antagonists for the treatment of advanced prostate cancer in preclinical metastatic models. As BN/GRP antagonists are already in clinical trials and GHRH antagonists are effective in androgen-independent prostate cancer models, these analogues could be considered for the management of advanced prostate carcinoma.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2005

Date

2005-01-01T00:00:00.000Z