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Castration-Resistant Prostate Cancer (CRPC): When Hormone Therapy Stops Working (2026)

Castration-Resistant Prostate Cancer (CRPC): When Hormone Therapy Stops Working

📅 Medically reviewed: April 20, 2026 | ⏱️ 8 min read | 🏥 Vivekananda Hospital, Hyderabad | 🩺 Urology

What is castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC)?

Castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) is prostate cancer that continues to progress despite having castrate levels of testosterone (<50 ng/dL). It is also called hormone-refractory prostate cancer.

CRPC can be:

  • Non-metastatic CRPC (nmCRPC): Rising PSA but no visible metastases on imaging
  • Metastatic CRPC (mCRPC): Visible metastases (bone, lymph nodes, viscera)

CRPC is NOT the same as castration-sensitive prostate cancer (which still responds to ADT). It represents a more aggressive phase of the disease.

📌 Key fact: Castration-resistant does NOT mean hormone therapy (ADT) is stopped. ADT is continued indefinitely because testosterone must remain castrate.

How is CRPC diagnosed?

CRPC is diagnosed when ALL of the following are present:

  • Castrate testosterone level: <50 ng/dL (confirmed)
  • Progression: One or more of:
    • PSA progression: 2 consecutive rises (≥25% above nadir, absolute increase ≥2 ng/mL)
    • Radiographic progression: New metastases on CT, bone scan, or PSMA PET
    • Clinical progression: New cancer-related symptoms (bone pain, urinary obstruction)

Staging for CRPC:

  • PSMA PET/CT: Most sensitive for detecting metastases
  • CT chest/abdomen/pelvis: For lymph nodes and visceral metastases
  • Bone scan: For bone metastases
Clinical pearl: PSA progression alone (without metastases) defines nmCRPC. Imaging is required to rule out metastases.

Non-metastatic CRPC (nmCRPC) – high-risk features

nmCRPC is defined by PSA rise without visible metastases. Treatment is recommended for patients at high risk of developing metastases.

High-risk features (PSA doubling time <10 months):

  • PSA doubling time <10 months is associated with high risk of metastasis and death
  • All patients with nmCRPC should have PSA checked every 3 months

Treatment options for nmCRPC:

  • Apalutamide (Erleada): Oral anti-androgen – improves metastasis-free survival (SPARTAN trial)
  • Enzalutamide (Xtandi): Oral anti-androgen – improves metastasis-free survival (PROSPER trial)
  • Darolutamide (Nubeqa): Oral anti-androgen – improves metastasis-free survival (ARAMIS trial)

No active surveillance:

  • nmCRPC with PSA doubling time <10 months should be treated (not watched)
  • Treatment reduces risk of metastasis by 70-80%
📌 Takeaway: nmCRPC is not benign. Newer anti-androgens (apalutamide, enzalutamide, darolutamide) significantly delay metastasis.

Metastatic CRPC (mCRPC) – treatment landscape

mCRPC is prostate cancer that has spread despite castrate testosterone. It is incurable but treatable with multiple lines of therapy.

Prognostic factors in mCRPC:

  • Good prognosis: Asymptomatic, no visceral metastases, long response to ADT
  • Poor prognosis: Symptomatic, visceral metastases (liver, lung), short response to ADT

Treatment options for mCRPC

Multiple effective treatments are available for mCRPC. Sequencing is key.

First-line mCRPC options (choose based on prior treatments):

  • Abiraterone (Zytiga) + prednisone: Oral androgen biosynthesis inhibitor – if not used in mHSPC
  • Enzalutamide (Xtandi): Oral anti-androgen – if not used in mHSPC
  • Docetaxel (chemotherapy): Especially for symptomatic disease or visceral metastases

Second-line mCRPC options (after docetaxel):

  • Cabazitaxel (Jevtana): Chemotherapy for post-docetaxel progression
  • Abiraterone or enzalutamide: If not used previously
  • Radium-223 (Xofigo): For bone-only metastases (no visceral disease)

Third-line and beyond mCRPC options:

  • PARP inhibitors (olaparib, rucaparib): For HRR mutations (BRCA, ATM, PALB2) – requires genetic testing
  • Lu-177-PSMA (Pluvicto): Radioligand therapy for PSMA-positive disease
  • Pembrolizumab (Keytruda): Only for MSI-H/dMMR tumors (rare)

Bone health management (all mCRPC patients):

  • Denosumab (Prolia, Xgeva) 120 mg SC every 4 weeks – reduces skeletal-related events
  • Zoledronic acid (Zometa) 4 mg IV every 4 weeks – alternative
  • Calcium + vitamin D supplementation
Takeaway: Treatment sequencing is critical. Most patients will receive 3-5 lines of therapy over 3-5 years.

Prognosis – survival by risk factors

Survival for mCRPC varies significantly by patient characteristics:

  • Good risk (asymptomatic, no visceral metastases): Median survival 3-5 years
  • Poor risk (symptomatic, visceral metastases): Median survival 1-2 years
  • BRCA2 mutations: More aggressive but respond to PARP inhibitors

Response to treatment:

  • PSA response (≥50% decline) correlates with improved survival
  • Duration of response varies (6-12 months per line of therapy)
📌 Note: Survival has improved dramatically. In the 1990s, mCRPC survival was 12-18 months. Today, it is 3-5 years for good-risk patients.

Clinical trials – importance of research

Patients with mCRPC should consider clinical trials, especially after approved options are exhausted.

Active areas of research:

  • Novel anti-androgens (next-generation)
  • Combination therapies (PARP inhibitor + anti-androgen)
  • Immunotherapy combinations
  • Targeted radioligand therapies (new isotopes)

How to find clinical trials:

  • ClinicalTrials.gov
  • Major cancer centres (MD Anderson, Memorial Sloan Kettering, Mayo Clinic)
  • Ask your oncologist about available trials
⚠️ Important: Clinical trials offer access to cutting-edge treatments. Discuss with your oncologist.

Interactive FAQ – Castration-resistant prostate cancer

What is castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC)?

Prostate cancer that progresses despite castrate testosterone levels (<50 ng/dL). It can be non-metastatic (nmCRPC) or metastatic (mCRPC).

How is CRPC diagnosed?

Castrate testosterone + PSA progression OR radiographic progression OR new symptoms.

What is the difference between nmCRPC and mCRPC?

nmCRPC: rising PSA without visible metastases. mCRPC: visible metastases on imaging (bone, lymph nodes, viscera).

What are the treatment options for nmCRPC?

Apalutamide, enzalutamide, or darolutamide – all delay metastasis in high-risk patients (PSA doubling time <10 months).

What is the first-line treatment for mCRPC?

Abiraterone, enzalutamide, or docetaxel – choice depends on prior treatments and symptoms.

Do PARP inhibitors work for CRPC?

Yes – for patients with HRR mutations (BRCA, ATM, PALB2). Genetic testing is required.

What is the prognosis for mCRPC?

Good risk: 3-5 years. Poor risk (symptomatic, visceral metastases): 1-2 years.

Is ADT continued in CRPC?

Yes – ADT is continued indefinitely to maintain castrate testosterone levels.

Should patients with nmCRPC be treated or observed?

Treated – especially if PSA doubling time <10 months. Treatment delays metastasis and improves survival.

🩺
Dr. Surya Prakash B
MS, MCh (Urology) | Consultant Urologist
Vivekananda Hospital, Begumpet, Hyderabad
Medical reviewer for 247healthcare.blog | Review date: April 20, 2026

Disclaimer: This information is for educational purposes. CRPC is a complex disease state requiring multidisciplinary care. Consult a medical oncologist at Vivekananda Hospital.

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