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Clinical Trials/NCT03624660
NCT03624660
Active, not recruiting
Phase 2

A Phase II Study of Dose-Escalated Proton-Based Radiation Therapy Delivered With a Simultaneous Integrated Boost (SIB) to Intraprostatic Tumors (IPT) Visible on Pretreatment Magnetic Resonance Image

University of Florida1 site in 1 country100 target enrollmentSeptember 24, 2018

Overview

Phase
Phase 2
Intervention
HR-A
Conditions
Adenocarcinoma of the Prostate
Sponsor
University of Florida
Enrollment
100
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
Cumulative rate of biochemical failure at 5 years after the end of treatment.
Status
Active, not recruiting
Last Updated
2 months ago

Overview

Brief Summary

The purpose of this research study is to determine if dose-escalated proton radiation therapy is a good way to treat high-risk prostate cancer. The study features hypofractionation and a simultaneous integrated boost to the magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) identified intraprostatic tumor (IPT) as a method of dose-escalating radiation therapy. The study will include patients with high-risk prostate cancer who are at the highest risk for recurrence. Radiation therapy will be delivered over the course of 8-9 weeks. Additionally, androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) will be started 8-10 weeks prior to starting radiation and continued for a total of 18 months if the patient decides to receive ADT.

Detailed Description

Prostate cancer is the most common noncutaneous cancer among men in the United States. The purpose of this research study is to determine if dose-escalated proton radiation therapy is a good way to treat high-risk prostate cancer. Proton therapy (PT) is a type of ionizing radiation therapy that reduces the dose of excess radiation delivered to normal tissues. By escalating the radiation dose just to the area of the known tumor within the prostate, one could potentially reduce the amount of excess radiation delivered to surrounding organs.This reduction in dose would improve the therapeutic ratio by improving disease control while minimizing the risk for additional toxicity. In an effort to take advantage of dose escalation's potential for improving disease control but also to limit toxicity, the use of advanced imaging to identify prostate cancer and provide a focal radiation boost to the area have proven to be useful. Recent advances in MRI have made it the most promising technique in identifying and targeting IPTs, improving both cancer control rates and decreasing toxicity. The study features hypofractionation and a simultaneous integrated boost to the MRI identified intraprostatic tumor (IPT) as a method of dose-escalating radiation therapy. The study will include patients with high-risk prostate cancer who are at the highest risk for recurrence. Radiation therapy will be delivered over the course of 8-9 weeks. Additionally, androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) will be started 8-10 weeks prior to starting radiation and continued for a total of 18 months.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
September 24, 2018
End Date
September 1, 2028
Last Updated
2 months ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
Male

Investigators

Responsible Party
Sponsor

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Patient must give study-specific informed consent on an IRB-approved consent prior to any research related procedures or study treatment.
  • Patient must be at least 18 years at the time of consent.
  • Adenocarcinoma of the prostate with AJCC Clinical Stage T1to T3b disease with histological evaluation via biopsy or repeat biopsy within 12 months prior to registration.
  • Patients must undergo a pretreatment diagnostic MRI of the prostate on a 1.5T to 3T Tesla machine within 6 months prior to study registration.
  • A focal IPT must be visible on MRI within the prostate and/or seminal vesicles and this MRI must be obtained within 6 months of planning CT scan.
  • A biopsy of the dominant lesion is recommended but not required. If an ultrasound guided sextant biopsy was positive for prostatic adenocarcinoma in the area of the MRI identified intraprostatic lesion, this will be acceptable and another guided biopsy targeting the MRI identified disease will not be necessary.
  • Patients with at least one of the following high-risk factors: cT3a-T3b OR Gleason 9-10 OR PSA \> 30 OR more than 1 high-risk factors must be present: clinical stage of T3, Gleason score 8-10, or PSA 20 ng/ml or greater.
  • Hemoglobin must be ≥ 10 g/ml within 4 months prior to registration.
  • Zubrod performance status must be 0-1 within 4 months prior to registration.
  • If patient has child-producing potential, they must be willing to use medically acceptable contraception during treatment and must be advised to use it for at least 1 year thereafter. This is not applicable if the patient is not sexually active or has had a vasectomy.

Exclusion Criteria

  • T4 prostate disease on CT, MRI, or physical exam.
  • Patients unable to undergo MRI of the prostate.
  • Patients with a greater than 25% change in prostate volume from the pretreatment MRI of the prostate demonstrating the IPT and the treatment planning MRI. Patients in this case must undergo a repeat diagnostic MRI on a 1.5T to 3.0T Tesla machine and an IPT must still be visible.
  • IPT that is more than 75% of the prostate volume when measured on the CT simulation scan.
  • Evidence of distant metastasis (M1).
  • Patients with positive nodes on cross-sectional imaging.
  • Previous prostate cancer local treatment including prostatectomy, hyperthermia, high intensity focused ultrasound, brachytherapy, external-beam radiation therapy, and/or cryotherapy.
  • Prior pelvic radiation therapy.
  • No prior myocardial infarction within the last 6 months, severe congestive heart failure, or end stage renal disease.
  • Active inflammatory bowel disease (diverticulitis, Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis) affecting the rectum.

Arms & Interventions

HR-A (High-risk A)

* Prostate and proximal seminal vesicles: 2 cobalt gray equivalent per fraction to a total dose of 78 cobalt gray equivalent. * Simultaneous integrated boost to the IPT: 2.2 cobalt gray equivalent per fraction to a total dose of 85.8 cobalt gray equivalent.

Intervention: HR-A

HR-B (High-risk B)

* Prostate, proximal seminal vesicles, and pelvic nodes: 2 cobalt gray equivalent per fraction to a total does of 46 cobalt gray equivalent. * Prostate and proximal seminal vesicles: 2 cobalt gray equivalent per fraction to a total dose of 32 cobalt gray equivalent. * Entire uninvolved seminal vesicle when part of the seminal vesicle is involved with tumor: 2 cobalt gray equivalent per fraction to a total dose of 78 cobalt gray equivalent. * Simultaneous integrated boost to the IPT: 2.2 cobalt gray equivalent per fraction to a total dose of 85.8 cobalt gray equivalent.

Intervention: HR-B

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Cumulative rate of biochemical failure at 5 years after the end of treatment.

Time Frame: 5 years after the end of radiation therapy

Biochemical failure will be defined based on the Phoenix definition. Biochemical failure has occurred if the post-treatment prostate-specific antigen (PSA) on at least two occasions rose more than 2 ng/ml above the PSA nadir. Rate of biochemical failure will be measured at 5 years after the end of treatment.

Secondary Outcomes

  • Cumulative rate of acute toxicity observed between day 1 of treatment and 90 days after treatment.(90 days after the end of radiation therapy)
  • Cumulative rate of late toxicity observed between 90 days and 5 years after end of treatment.(60 months after the end of radiation therapy)
  • Assessment of overall and disease-free survival(5 years after the end of radiation therapy)
  • Rate of change in sexual, bowel, and urinary function from baseline measurement to 5 years after end of treatment.(Rate of change between baseline measurement and 5 years end of radiation therapy)
  • Assessment of local persistence or local recurrence(5 years after the end of radiation therapy)
  • Rate of distant metastases five years after end of radiation therapy(5 years after the end of radiation therapy)

Study Sites (1)

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