Abstract

BackgroundThis study was conducted to investigate a new short-course radiotherapy regimen for patients with metastatic hormone refractory prostate cancer (HRPC) presenting with a dominant debilitating symptom.Methods / designThis is an international, multi-center single arm prospective feasibility study that aims to include 34 patients with HRPC and a dominant debilitating symptom. The dominant symptomatic lesion will receive 4 × 5 Gy of high-precision radiotherapy, and the most aggressive part of the lesion 4 × 7 Gy using a simultaneous integrated boost technique. Based on advanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), an apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) map will be calculated for the lesion using diffusion weighted imaging sequences. The dominant symptomatic lesion (GTV1) is drawn manually using the information from T2w-MRI and computed tomography scans. The most aggressive part of the dominant lesion (GTV2) is defined by using the ADC map. An auxiliary volume is created including only voxels in the GTV1 that presents with ADC values below 1200 × 10− 6 mm2/s. The most aggressive part is defined as voxels with an ADC value below the median ADC value. Primary endpoint is feasibility, i.e. proportion of patients who complete radiotherapy with ≥90% of the prescribed dose. Secondary endpoints include dominant symptom score, progression-free survival (freedom from symptoms), overall survival, acute toxicity, quality of life, change in ADC from baseline to end of treatment and 6 months following treatment.DiscussionIf this new radiotherapy regimen proves to be feasible, a prospective randomized phase II/III dose escalation study will be designed in order to improve the outcomes of palliative radiotherapy of symptomatic metastatic HRPC.Study statusThe study is ongoing and will be recruiting patients soon.Trial registrationclinicaltrials.gov NCT03658434. Initially registered on 30th of July, 2018

Highlights

  • This study was conducted to investigate a new short-course radiotherapy regimen for patients with metastatic hormone refractory prostate cancer (HRPC) presenting with a dominant debilitating symptom

  • If this new radiotherapy regimen proves to be feasible, a prospective randomized phase II/III dose escalation study will be designed in order to improve the outcomes of palliative radiotherapy of symptomatic metastatic HRPC

  • Sample size calculation The objective of this study is to investigate the feasibility of applying hypo-fractionated radiotherapy to treat a dominant symptomatic lesion in patients with HRPC

Read more

Summary

Introduction

This study was conducted to investigate a new short-course radiotherapy regimen for patients with metastatic hormone refractory prostate cancer (HRPC) presenting with a dominant debilitating symptom. Large autopsy studies found that 35% of the patients with prostate cancer had metastatic disease. Patients may present with disabling symptoms from local pelvic disease progression with an incidence of 10– 18% or higher in node-positive patients treated with antiandrogen therapy alone [2,3,4]. Metastatic or locally advanced prostate cancer (PC) initially responds well to hormonal manipulation by androgen withdrawal and peripheral androgen blockade. Such patients have high risk of developing a hormone-refractory prostate cancer (HRPC). In case of large treatment volumes, radiotherapy can be associated with significant toxicities, in the rectum and the urinary bladder [11,12,13,14]

Objectives
Methods
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call