Hi all. Reminder im a PCa brother, been through the chemo and radiation and now living in 3mth intervals 😀 waiting on PSA results.
Although I'm extremely thankful to be alive and fighting im trying to research ways we might STILL be able to look good naked. I know we see posts now and then about SARMS and ostarine in particular but I'm trying to understand it all.
We need to keep natural test low and I assume synthetic test would also he bad. Aas would increase test and thus not for us...but aas are anabolic in nature. Would androgenic products work for us?
Anything else out there? More than anything I just want to have hopefully a great conversation on this subject.
I'll add that im working as hard as ever in gym and kitchen but as we all know on ADT it's a war we're unarmed for....
Thanks all
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Yzinger
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Take it for what it's worth. Maybe I was just lucky. In 2018 I was diagnosed T3a G4+5 N1M0 stage 4 (T3a is on my pathology report but surgeon indicated T4 - both are bad). HSPC->CRPC progression SOC stats show that I had 1-2 years as HSPC. As of now I'm still HSPC. Odds are <1% that I would be HSPC if I followed the no-T SOC approach.
• Testosterone Propionate: 50 mg intramuscular (IM) every 3 days during High-T phases.
• Androgen Deprivation Therapy (ADT): Continuous suppression of endogenous testosterone.
• Darolutamide (Nubeqa): Administered during Low-T phases with a 2-day washout pre-High-T.
Cycle Structure:
• Variable Cycle Length: 2–70 days, adjusted based on PSA kinetics and clinical response.
• PARP Inhibition: Olaparib (300 mg daily) added for 6 days/cycle (3 days pre-High-T to 3 days post-High-T) to exploit DNA repair vulnerability during androgen fluctuations.
Cyclic Adaptation
1. High-T Phase:
• Serum testosterone peaks at 1,500–2,000 ng/dL (Cmax at 24–48 hours post-injection).
• BAT has typically been used on CRPC men. TRANSFORMER and RESTORE are examples.
• A phase II BAT study (BATMAN) showed evidence that BAT can be applied to HSPC.
Research Impact:
• Supports BAT initiation during HSPC to delay castration resistance.
• Highlights KMT2D mutations as potential predictive biomarkers for stress-induced therapies.
Conclusion
This case demonstrates unprecedented HSPC control in G9/T3 prostate cancer using early pBAT, challenging traditional CRPC-focused BAT applications. Biomarker evolution (declining TMB, undetectable ctDNA) and AR/IGF1R proteomic profiles provide mechanistic insights into BAT’s efficacy in hormone-sensitive settings.
Commentary: TRANSFORMER: A Randomized Phase II Study Comparing Bipolar Androgen Therapy Versus Enzalutamide in Asymptomatic Men With Castration-Resistant Metastatic Prostate Cancer – PMC ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articl...
Summary: ESMO 2021: Bipolar Androgen Therapy (BAT) Plus Olaparib in Men With Metastatic Castration-Resistant Prostate Cancer urotoday.com/conference-hig...
Summary: A Multicohort Open-label Phase II Trial of Bipolar Androgen Therapy in Men with Metastatic Castration-resistant Prostate Cancer (RESTORE): A Comparison of Post-abiraterone Versus Post-enzalutamide Cohorts ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articl...
Commentary: A Multicohort Open-label Phase II Trial of Bipolar Androgen Therapy in Men with Metastatic Castration-resistant Prostate Cancer (RESTORE): A Comparison of Post-abiraterone Versus Post-enzalutamide Cohorts – PMC ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articl...
PSA provocation by bipolar androgen therapy may predict duration of response to first-line androgen deprivation: Updated results from the BATMAN study – PubMed pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/359...
PSA provocation by bipolar androgen therapy may predict duration of response to first‐line androgen deprivation: Updated results from the BATMAN study - Denmeade - 2022 - The Prostate - Wiley Online Library onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi...
Thanks for the update on your pBAT regimen. Why have you switched your Tp injections from eod to every 3rd day? Do you have new Cmax data that indicates a longer time to reach peak than previously thought?
And why is there such a big spread in the half-life (19-48 hrs)?
Thanks for pointing those errors out. Where did I specify the 3rd day? I need to fix that. And I'm going to tighten up the half-life. Those are numbers from various studies but the half-life I've observed in myself and others is 30-40 hours.
• Clinical Trials: Phase II study of pBAT in high-risk HSPC (endpoints: CRPC-free survival, ctDNA clearance)5.
Safety and Tolerability
• Monitoring: Regular CBC, CMP, BP, Testosterone, and PSA tracking.
• Adverse Events: No significant hematologic (e.g., anemia), hepatic (e.g., elevated ALT/AST), or cardiovascular (e.g., hypertension) toxicity reported.
Conclusion
This case demonstrates unprecedented HSPC control in G9/T3 prostate cancer using early pBAT, challenging traditional CRPC-focused BAT applications. Biomarker evolution (declining TMB, undetectable ctDNA) and proteomic profiles provide mechanistic insights into BAT’s efficacy in hormone-sensitive settings.
Thanks for this thorough info on your program and for letting us know what you find out about half-lives of the various kinds of T. Late this summer I may work in some rBAT cycles, so I will be integrating your latest thinking into the design.
A quick note about SARMs or anabolics in general, we need to look carefully at the anabolic/androgenic ratio - simply, how anabolic are they (good part) vs how androgenic they are (usually the bad part).
Rad-140 has a 90:1 anabolic to androgenic ratio. That's super good.
Ostarine has a 10:1 ratio. Very good. But what makes it even a better choice is low binding for the ARs and it has some safety data.
I sometimes take a few mg/day of Ostarine or Rad.
It's a personal decision but I asked myself "what's the use of living 30 years if I look and feel like s..."? Answer for me was zero use. So I take little risks. I believe if we're smart about it the little risks can reward us with better health and also better PCa control.
Thanks for comments. I tend to agree on some risk. Educated and spoken to a doc of course too. I've mentioned before using sarms to my mo and at that time wasn't suggested. I didn't push issue as I trust my team but I do want to explore deeper
I don't think many MOs will give their ok for SARMs. Liability. And they are right. There is a risk. They are not SOC and haven't been through extensive trials.
I will say (and say again and again and again...) that if I had followed SOC I'd probably be dead. SOC is good but I had really severe cancer and couldn't afford "good".
PM me and I'll send you a onedrive link to the latest one (much more info than the one on Amazon - plus it's completely free vs. the $2 that Amazon makes me charge).
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