Fosfestrol is used as a form of high-dose estrogen therapy in the treatment of castration-resistant prostate cancer. It us added once progression of metastases has occurred following therapy with other interventions such orchiectomy, gonadotropin-releasing hormone modulators, and nonsteroidal antiandrogens. Fosfestrol has also been used to prevent the testosterone flare at the start of gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist therapy in men with prostate cancer. Fosfestrol sodium is given at a dosage of 600 to 1200 mg/day by slow intravenous infusion over a period of 1 hour for a treatment duration of 5 to 10 days in men with prostate cancer. Following this, it is given at a dose of 300 mg/day for 10 to 20 days. Maintenance doses of fosfestrol sodium of 300 to 600 mg may be given four times per week. This may be gradually reduced to one 300 to 600-mg dose per week over a period of several months. Fosfestrol sodium is also used to a lesser extent by oral administration initially at a dosage of 360 to 480 mg three times per day in the treatment of prostate cancer. Maintenance doses of 120 to 240 mg three times per day may be used and can be gradually reduced to 240 mg/day.
Fosfestrol is an estrogen, or an agonist of the estrogen receptors. It is inactive itself and acts as a prodrug of diethylstilbestrol. Similarly to diethylstilbestrol, fosfestrol has powerful antigonadotropic effects and strongly suppresses testosterone levels in men. It decreases testosterone levels into the castrate range within 12 hours of the initiation of therapy. Fosfestrol may also act by other mechanisms, such as via direct cytotoxic effects in the prostate gland.
Fosfestrol was first patented in 1941 and was mentioned in the literature by Huggins. Conjugated estrogens and diethylstilbestrol sulfate, which are water-soluble estrogens, were first reported to be effective in the treatment of prostate cancer via intravenous administration in 1952. Starting in October 1952, Flocks and colleagues studied intravenous fosfestrol in the treatment of prostate cancer, publishing their findings in 1955. Fosfestrol was first introduced for medical use in 1955 under the brand names Stilphostrol and ST 52 in the United States and France, respectively.
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Generic names
Fosfestrol is the generic name of the drug and its,, and, while diethylstilbestrol diphosphate is its and fosfestrolo is its. It is also known as stilbestrol diphosphate. Fosfestrol sodium is its and.
Brand names of fosfestrol include Cytonal, Difostilben, Honovan, Honvan, Honvol, Honvon, Fosfostilben, Fostrolin, ST 52, Stilbetin, Stilbol, Stilbostatin, Stilphostrol, and Vagestrol, among others.