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Clinical Trials/NCT01956058
NCT01956058
Completed
Phase 2

Recurrent Prostate Cancer After Irradiation Treated With Brachytherapy Remedial: Phase 2 Study

Centre Georges Francois Leclerc1 site in 1 country30 target enrollmentMarch 26, 2013

Overview

Phase
Phase 2
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Recurrent Prostate Cancer
Sponsor
Centre Georges Francois Leclerc
Enrollment
30
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
Toxicity occurence
Status
Completed
Last Updated
2 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

After a curative treatment by radiotherapy for localized prostate cancer, between 20% and 50% of patients may have a biological relapse as a progressive re -rise of PSA. After prostate brachytherapy with low flow, this rate is between 2% and 6%. Depending on risk factors initially present, some patients will have a micro metastatic disease at the time of re-rise, but others will have a true local recurrence purely intra-prostate. Local recurrence after radiotherapy is associated with a high incidence of distant metastatic relapse and poor overall survival. For these reasons, the possibility of offering a local treatment for this selected population of patients can have a major therapeutic interest and allow changing a situation often considered palliative to the possibility of a second curative treatment.

Currently, there is no consensus regarding the optimal management of patients with purely local recurrence after prostate irradiation at first intention. When an external radiotherapy or brachytherapy is performed as first choice in a patient with prostate cancer, several remedial treatments have been proposed, with controversial results the decision-making for clinicians and for difficult patients. These main therapeutic options remedial (surgery, cryotherapy and brachytherapy) have the potential for complications such as rectal injury, impotence or incontinence Brachytherapy is a new salvage treatment being evaluated in the United States (Phase II study of the Radiation Therapy Oncology Group No. 0526). Several retrospective trials have shown very encouraging results in terms of acute toxicity and biochemical control in the short term. Thus, a team from Mount Sinai in New York recently published for the first time 10 years retrospective results with this approach. In their experience after treatment failures with external beam radiotherapy or brachytherapy, a dose of 122 Gy was delivered over 90% of the prostate gland. Doing this they observed biochemical control rates and survival specific of 54 % and 96 %, respectively at 10 years, with an hormone treatment associated (median 6 months) in 84 % of cases. Four patients had grade 3 toxicity or higher (11%). To reduce the rate of late toxicities the team from the University Of California San Francisco (UCSF), tested focal brachytherapy guided by functional MRI (MRI spectroscopy) to re-treat local recurrence after initial brachytherapy as monotherapy or boost. By delivering 144 Gy on recidivism objectified on MRI, the authors observed that a minimal dose of 37Gy covered 90 % of the prostate gland to treat the risk of microscopic disease. Doing this, the rate of observed toxicities and biochemical control appeared encouraging, with a median follow-up of 2 years, since no grade 3 toxicity was observed and 74% of patients achieved a PSA nadir <0.5 ng / mL without associated hormone. In case of external radiation or brachytherapy, several attempts proposed to associate an injection of hyaluronic acid gel to the prostate - rectum interface to spare healthy tissue irradiated and thus reduce the rate of radiation proctitis. The feasibility of implementing this gel has been demonstrated in patients with non- irradiated tissues. No inherent toxicity of the injection of hyaluronic acid gel has been described after prostate brachytherapy first line. The feasibility of this injection remains unproven to date on patients previously irradiated externally or by brachytherapy. We hypothesize that the risk of radiation proctitis and fistulas front prostate could be reduced using this technique in this indication.

We propose to carry out a French prospective multicenter phase II trial combining brachytherapy remedial with an injection of hyaluronic acid after surgery to reduce the risk of radiation proctitis and / or recto -urinary fistula in a patient population hyper- selected with a high probability of isolated local recurrence.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
March 26, 2013
End Date
September 14, 2015
Last Updated
2 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Single Group
Sex
Male

Investigators

Responsible Party
Sponsor

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • localized prostate adenocarcinoma who presented as baseline characteristics: PSA ≤ 20ng/ml (with a rate of increase \<2ng/ml/an in the 18 months preceding the biopsy diagnosis), Gleason score ≤ 7 and T1c to t2c.
  • Indication of brachytherapy remedial validated
  • Prior treatment of prostatic adenocarcinoma by radiotherapy or brachytherapy
  • Recurrence histologically proven by biopsy within ≥ 24 months after the end of the first radiotherapy or brachytherapy
  • Re-rise of PSA biochemical assays on three successive but with a PSA recurrence \<10ng/ml
  • Patient over 18 years
  • WHO status 0 or 1
  • Information informed and signed by the patient or his legal representative

Exclusion Criteria

  • Volume Prostate\> 50 cm3
  • proctitis and / or radiation cystitis grade ≥ 2 at the time of inclusion
  • Initial rT3a-RT4 at the time of recurrence (clinical or MRI)
  • Gleason score ≥ 8 (if it can be established after central review) at the time of recurrence
  • lymph node and bone metastases
  • invaded the seminal vesicles (diagnosed by MRI or biopsy)
  • History of prostatectomy, TURP, or cryoablation Ablatherm ®
  • node lymphadenectomy for "restaging" before salvage treatment
  • Getting Started with hormone therapy since the diagnosis of recurrence
  • History of cancer within 5 years prior to entry into the trial other than basal cell skin

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Toxicity occurence

Time Frame: from the date of treatment up to 3 years of follow-up of the last patient treated

The main objective of the study is to assess the occurrence of rectal and urinary toxicities grade ≥ 3 occurred within 3 years after brachytherapy remedial

Secondary Outcomes

  • colostomy and urostomy / fistula(for each patient from the date of intervention up to the date of colostomy and / or urostomy for fistula during the follow-up period of 5 years)
  • Quality of life related to health EORTC QLQ C30 + EPIC survey.(for each patient every 3 months the first year following the interverntion and then evey six months up to five years)
  • The specific 5-year survival(from inclusion up to 5 years of follow-up for each patient)
  • Acute and late urinary toxicity identified by self-administered questionnaire (QLQ C30 symptomatic dimensions and questionnaire scores EPIC + IPSS)(for each patient every 3 months the first year following the interverntion and then evey six months up to five years)
  • Assess sexual toxicities by self-administered questionnaire (IIEF 5)(for each patient every 3 months the first year following the interverntion and then evey six months up to five years)
  • The time until the start of palliative hormone(for each patient from intervention date up to 5 years of follow-up)
  • The accumulated dose delivered to the rectum after brachytherapy remedial.(after the last treatment of the last patient in september 2015 (anticipated))
  • survival biochemical relapse-free, according to Phoenix criteria (nadir + 2 ng/ml)(from the date of intervention up to 5 years of follow-up)
  • Investigate the observance of the injection of hyaluronic acid after surgery.(after the last treatment of the last patient in september 2015 (anticipated))
  • Evaluate the acute and late urinary toxicity (NCI-CTC)(for each patient from the date of the intervention up to 5 years)
  • The overall survival at 5 years(for every patients from inclusion date up to five years of follow-up)

Study Sites (1)

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