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Brief Title: Androgen Suppression With Stereotactic Body or External Beam Radiation Therapy (ASSERT)
Official Title: Androgen Suppression With Stereotactic Body or External Beam Radiation Therapy (ASSERT): A Phase II Randomized Trial for Intermediate and High Risk Prostate Cancer
Study ID: NCT02594072
Brief Summary: Two radiation therapy techniques are commonly used for the treatment of intermediate and high risk prostate cancer: brachytherapy and external beam radiation therapy (EBRT). However, both have limitations. Brachytherapy, in which radioactive seeds are inserted into the prostate, produces excellent outcomes but is invasive and not all patients are eligible or willing to receive this treatment. EBRT, while gentle at the time of delivery, tends to be very prolonged and may have poorer outcomes than brachytherapy. This study will examine the use of stereotactic ablative radiotherapy (SABR), in which patients are given only a few, high dose radiation treatments. Treatments are short, non-invasive, applicable to patients not able to do brachytherapy, and may be more effective than conventional EBRT. This study will compare SABR with EBRT in terms of the rates of acute and late toxicities for each treatment, disease-free survival, and health-related quality of life measures.
Detailed Description: The current study is a randomized phase II study comparing high speed, single arc, LINAC-based prostate stereotactic ablative radiotherapy (SABR) with conventional external beam radiation treatment (EBRT), along with androgen suppression (AS), in men with intermediate and high risk prostate cancer, who are either unsuitable for or unwilling to have brachytherapy. The two primary objectives of the study are to assess the feasibility of randomization, and to compare the rates of acute and late toxicities. Should randomization prove feasible, and toxicities comparable, a future phase 3 trial will be pursued. Primary objectives: 1. To determine the proportion of eligible patients who are willing to be randomized 2. To estimate and compare the proportions of acute and late toxicities, focussing on grade 3 and 4 complications of the treatment interventions as delivered in the British Columbia (BC) Cancer Agency Secondary objectives: 1. To compare the disease free survival as reflected in biochemical relapse free survival at five years between the two interventions 2. To compare the health related quality of life as reflected in changes on the EPIC questionnaire between the two interventions 3. To quantify the degree of intra-fraction motion with the proposed SABR technique Research Method To determine the willingness of eligible patients to be randomized, a screening log documenting the number of eligible subjects approached for participation will be maintained. Subjects who are approached but who decline participation will undergo a short interview by the Clinical Research Associate as to the reason for non-participation. The Clinical Research Associate will read from a script with statements to make sure that subjects who refuse the trial know that they are free to provide or not provide the reasons for declining the trial and that their answers will not affect the care they will receive. They will be asked to list up to five reasons for non-participation in the trial. At the conclusion of the trial, qualitative analyses will be done for the reason of non-participation. The two radiation treatment protocols, conventional EBRT and SABR, will be compared in a randomized, phase II study. Patients with biopsy-proven intermediate or high risk prostate cancer will be accrued. T3 or T4 disease, men with International Prostate Symptom Score \>20 and prostate volume \> 90 cc are not eligible. Men with high risk disease must have a \<15% risk of pelvic lymph node involvement to be eligible. Eligible subjects will be identified by the treating oncologist and enrolled through the clinical trials unit of the participating regional cancer centre. Once the consent form is signed, a Study Entry Form will be sent to the trial administrative centre located at the Vancouver Island Centre of the BC Cancer Agency. A Patient Identification Number will be assigned and the patient will be randomized to a treatment arm. This study proposes that eighty (80) patients be randomized in a 1:1 ratio. Subjects randomized to Arm 1 (conventional EBRT) will receive 73.68 Gy in 28 fractions (5 treatment days per week over 5.5 weeks). Subjects randomized to Arm 2 (SABR) will receive a prescribed dose of 36.25 Gy in 5 fractions over 5 weeks (one treatment day per week). Subjects randomized to the SABR arm will undergo an additional procedure prior to radiation treatment to place gold seed fiducials (placement of gold seed fiducials is optional in the EBRT arm and is at the discretion of the treating centre). Androgen-Deprivation Therapy (ADT) will be administered to all patients on both treatment arms. ADT will consist of luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) agonist monotherapy, but total androgen blockade is also permitted at the discretion of the treating oncologist. The total duration of ADT will be 6 months for men with intermediate risk disease, and 18 months for those with high risk disease. ADT is to be initiated prior to the start of RT. PATIENT ASSESSMENTS AND FOLLOWUP Pre-radiotherapy assessment: All patients must have a biopsy indicating prostate adenocarcinoma within 365 days of trial registration. A full history and physical examination, with digital rectal examination, must be done within 60 days of registration. CT scan of the abdomen and pelvis and nuclear medicine bone scan must be done within 60 days of registration. Baseline PSA and testosterone must be done not more than 60 days before registration and repeated in the week before radiotherapy to document response to androgen deprivation therapy. Physician assessment must be done within 60 days of randomization. Baseline QOL assessment (EPIC), prostate symptom score (IPSS), and sexual health inventory (SHIM) are to be done prior to the start of radiotherapy. Assessments during radiotherapy: All patients will be seen by a radiation oncologist (or clinical associate) weekly during radiotherapy. QOL assessment (EPIC), IPSS/SHIM, and adverse events assessment (CTCAEv4, modified Radiation Therapy Oncology Group (RTOG)/SOMA) will be done during week 5 of radiotherapy for both Arms 1 and 2. Post-radiotherapy assessment and follow-up: All patients will be assessed 2 weeks and 8 weeks post-radiotherapy, then every 6 months until 2 years, and then yearly until year 5. At each of these time points patients will undergo physician assessment, PSA/testosterone, QOL assessment (EPIC), IPSS/SHIM, and adverse events assessment (CTCAEv4, modified RTOG/SOMA). Data Analysis Actuarial rates of acute (defined as occurring ≤ 6 months after initiation of treatment) and late (defined as occurring \> 6 months after initiation of treatment) as well as the prevalence of late toxicities at 1, 2 and 5 years will be determined. Grade 3 and 4 toxicities will be compared between intervention groups using exact test statistics (SAS FREQ procedure, SAS Gary, NC). Stratified analyses will also use the SAS FREQ procedure and Zelen's exact test for equal odds ratios, exact confidence limits for the common odds ratio, and an exact test for the common odds ratio. Quality of life scores and EPIC scales will be compared between interventions using the t-test statistic.
Minimum Age:
Eligible Ages: CHILD, ADULT, OLDER_ADULT
Sex: MALE
Healthy Volunteers: No
BC Cancer Agency Fraser Valley Center, Surrey, British Columbia, Canada
BC Cancer Agency Vancouver Island Center, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada
Name: Abraham Alexander, MD
Affiliation: British Columbia Cancer Agency
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Name: Winkle Kwan, MD
Affiliation: British Columbia Cancer Agency
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR