This is a study to first establish feasibility of the study and then to register the treatment data of adult patients with a diagnosis of intermediate risk of prostate cancer presenting for definitive radiation treatment with either proton radiotherapy or Intensity Modulated Radiation Therapy (IMRT). The investigators propose to employ a hypofractionated strategy with our image guided treatment to further improve cancer control and decrease toxicity.
This study will be done in two phases, first, a feasibility study and then a registration study. In the first, feasibility will be established using the primary objectives set below. The second phase will begin no earlier than 30 days after the last patient in the initial phase has completed treatment and once safety and feasibility has been verified. The secondary objectives will serve as the objectives for the second phase of the study.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
303
Walter Reed National Military Medical Center
Bethesda, Maryland, United States
Abramson Cancer Center of the University of Pennsylvania
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Number of Participants with Adverse Events
Unable to tolerate 10% of treatments using proton radiotherapy. Unable to complete all treatments. Cannot be given treatment because anatomy is such that a dosimetrically satisfactory treatment plan cannot be devised.
Time frame: Within 10 days
Acute Toxicity
Any grade 2 or higher GI or GU toxicity, other than GI or GU toxicity or any grade 3 or higher toxicity, other than GI or GU. In the feasibility phase of this trial, the observation window for acute toxicty is extended to 60 days from completion of radiotherapy, as a feasibility precaution.
Time frame: Within 60 days of completion of radiotherapy
Late toxicity
Any grade 2 or higher GI or GU toxicity or any grade 3 or higher toxicity, other than GI or GU which occurs beyond 60 days from completion of radiotherapy. Late toxicities will be graded according to the RTOG/EORTC late morbidity scoring system.
Time frame: open-ended
Biochemical/clinicalprogression-free survival
The time from start of radiotherapy to either documented increase in PSA or clinical progression of disease (based on CT, MRI, or bone scan), death due to any cause or last patient contact alive.
Time frame: 5 years
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