The purpose of this study is to determine whether combination treatment of prostate cancer with IMC-A12 (an antibody which blocks insulin-like growth factor receptor activity) with hormonal therapy (testosterone lowering) before prostatectomy, will be more effective than prior results with hormonal therapy alone.
Androgen deprivation has long been the principal means of controlling advanced prostate cancer, but it does not cure the disease and all patients ultimately progress if tumor is not eliminated with definitive local therapy. Neoadjuvant androgen deprivation prior to radical prostatectomy can downstage localized disease and reduce the likelihood of residual disease at the margins, but does not improve failure free survival. It has been demonstrated that despite androgen deprivation with luteinizing hormone releasing hormone (LHRH) agonists or orchiectomy, prostate tissue and prostate cancer maintain levels of androgens which are more than adequate to continue to stimulate the androgen receptor and downstream signaling. These levels of androgen may continue to allow both survival of tumor cells and induction of resistance by overexpression of receptor. The anti-insulin-like growth factor type I receptor (IGF-IR) antibody IMC-A12 blocks translocation of the androgen receptor to the nucleus, dramatically augmenting efficacy of androgen deprivation in human prostate xenograft models. The combination of androgen deprivation with IMC-A12 is anticipated to more effectively treat cancer within the prostate, optimizing local control, while potentially eliminating micrometastatic disease. We propose to test this hypothesis in this phase II study, administering neoadjuvant androgen deprivation therapy IMC-A12 prior to radical prostatectomy for patients with clinically localized, high risk prostate cancer for 3 months. Patients with clinically localized, and surgically resectable (cT1-T3) prostate cancer, at high risk for relapse who are candidates for radical prostatectomy will be treated with LHRH agonist and androgen receptor antagonist combined with IMC-A12, 10 mg/kg given intravenously every 14 days for 12 weeks. Patients will undergo biopsy of the prostate prior to treatment and radical prostatectomy 12 weeks after initiation of treatment. The primary endpoint of the study is to evaluate the ability of LHRH agonist with IMC-A12 to induce a complete pathologic remission Samples from the current study will be compared to control, untreated prostatectomy specimens from the Northwest Prostate SPORE Tissue Core and a concurrent set of specimens from patients treated with 12 weeks of combined androgen deprivation.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
29
IMC-A12 will be administered every 2 weeks for a total of 6 doses at 10 mg/kg per dose. The last dose of IMC-A12 will be at least 2 weeks prior to prostatectomy.
Bicalutamide 50 mg daily orally for 12 weeks
10.8 mg subcutaneous once
Virginia Mason Medical Center
Seattle, Washington, United States
Seattle Cancer Care Alliance
Seattle, Washington, United States
University of Washington Medical Center
Seattle, Washington, United States
The primary endpoint of the study is to determine the effects of combining androgen deprivation with IMC-A12 on pathologic tumor stage (pathologic complete response).
Time frame: At the time of prostatectomy after 3 months of treatment
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