Prostate cancer (PCa) is the most common solid organ cancer in North American men. Patients becoming refractory to loco-regional therapy receive androgen deprivation therapy, but their disease will inevitably progress to metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC). Treatment failure and poor progression-free survival could be explained by the fact that PCa metastases in the same patient may be polyclonal, showing opposite responses to systemic therapies. This project aims to recruit 100 patients with mCRPC in order to determine the prevalence of intrapatient intermetastasis polyclonality and NED using PET/CT triple-tracer PSMA/FDG/OCTREOTATE imaging and eligibility for either PSMA or OCTREOTATE radioligand therapy (RLT).
Introduction: Prostate cancer (PCa) is the most common solid organ cancer in North American men. Patients becoming refractory to loco-regional therapy receive androgen deprivation therapy, but their disease will inevitably progress to metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC). Of the five treatments approved for mCRPC patients, none has been shown to increase median overall survival beyond 4.8 months. Treatment failure and poor progression-free survival could be explained by the fact that PCa metastases in the same patient may be polyclonal, showing opposite responses to systemic therapies. Indeed, neuroendocrine differentiation from adenocarcinoma is often reported in metastatic PCa, which is associated with increased disease aggressiveness. Currently, no molecular tools are available to follow non-invasively mCRPC transdifferentiation and diagnose patients with neuroendocrine and/or polyclonal PCa. Positron emission tomography (PET) is a promising type of imaging using radio-labeled tracers to specifically identify tumour cells. Hypothesis: The hypothesis of the 3TMPO clinical study is that the prevalence of intrapatient intermetastasis polyclonality can be diagnosed by combining 18F-FDG to other specific PET tracers that have the ability to non-invasively differentiate CRPC adenocarcinoma (CRPC-Adeno) (68Ga-PSMA) from neuroendocrine CRPC (CRPC-NE) tumours (68Ga-OCTREOTATE). Objectives: The study objectives are to determine, in mCRPC patients, the prevalence of intrapatient intermetastasis polyclonality and NED using PET/CT triple tracer PSMA/FDG/OCTREOTATE imaging and their eligibility for radioligand therapy (RLT). Method: This multicentre observational clinical study, for which prevalence of intrapatient intermetastasis polyclonality was set as the primary outcome, will recruit 100 mCRPC patients at 5 different sites across the province of Québec. 68Ga-PSMA and 18F-FDG PET scans will be performed on all enrolled patients, while 68Ga-OCTREOTATE will be performed on those presenting at least one PSMA-negative/FDG-positive lesion. The uptake of each individual lesion will be assessed for each PET tracer and patients with lesions presenting discordant uptake profiles will be considered as having polyclonal disease. OCTREOTATE-positivity will confirm the presence of CRPC-NE. PSMA or OCTREOTATE positivity of all lesions (or at least those with FDG uptake) will determine the eligibility for PSMA and OCTREOTATE RLT, respectively. Relevance: Paradigm-shifting diagnostic and therapeutic strategies are urgently needed to improve the survival of patients with PCa and to deepen our understanding of mCRPC progression.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
100
Patients will undergo 18F-FDG and whole-body PET/CT (vertex to thighs, or to feet if known lower-limb metastases). The patient will be measured and weighed before the exam in order to calculate a personalized dose. An intravenous catheter will be put in place in peripheral vein to allow injection of the tracer.
Patients will sequentially undergo 68Ga-PSMA and whole-body PET/CT (vertex to thighs, or to feet if known lower-limb metastases).
In the case a patient would present at least one PSMA-negative/FDG-positive lesion, he will be referred to undertake a whole-body 68Ga-OCTREOTATE PET/CT within 10 days of the first PET/CT. The delay between this third PET scan and the last one should be minimal (not least than 18 hours, not more than 10 days). Images and data will be reviewed centrally within 4 days by the Imaging Corelab, which will produce a final report confirming patient's eligibility to Radioligand therapy (RLT).
Patients presenting FDG-positive/PSMA-negative or Octreotate-positive lesions on imaging will be asked to undergo a biopsy of these lesions (optional) for research purposes. Bone or soft-tissue biopsies will be collected by an interventional radiologist according to site's standard-of-care procedure and sent to the local pathology department for preparation (formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded); the blocks being sent to the Pathology Corelab.
CHUM, Université de Montréal
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
McGill University Health Centre
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
CIUSSS du Centre-Ouest-de -l'île-de-Montreal (CIUSSS-COMTL)
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
CHU de Québec - Université Laval (CRCHUQc-UL),
Québec, Quebec, Canada
Centre de recherche du CHUS (CRCHUS), Division of Urology, CIUSSS de l'Estrie - CHUS (CIUSSSE-CHUS)
Sherbrooke, Quebec, Canada
Prevalence of INTRAPATIENT INTERMETASTATIC HETEROGENEITY
A patient with at least two lesions with discordant FDG/PSMA/OCTREOTATE multi-tracer imaging phenotypes.
Time frame: Baseline
Proportion of neuroendocrine lesion
Neuroendocrine lesion DEFINITION: A patient with at least one OCTREOTATE-positive lesion or histopathological features of neuroendocrine differentiation
Time frame: Baseline
Proportion of eligible patients for PSMA-RLT or OCTREOTATE-RLT
Eligibility for PSMA RLT is defined as : Having (1) at least one lesion that is PSMA-positive, and (2) no lesion that is PSMA-negative and FDG-positive. Eligibility for Octreotate RLT: Having (1) at least one lesion that is Octreotate-positive, and (2) no lesion that is Octreotate-negative and FDG-positive.
Time frame: Baseline
18F-FDG, 68Ga-PSMA and 68Ga-OCTREOTATE positive lesions
POSITIVE LESION: 18F-FDG, 68Ga-PSMA and 68Ga-OCTREOTATE lesion uptake will be defined as positive if greater than that of the liver \[18,19\]. Using quantitative imaging methods, standardized uptake value ratio (SUVR, i.e. the ratio between lesion uptake (SUVpeak) over liver uptake (SUVmean)) will be obtained for each lesion with each tracer. For a given tracer, lesion positivity is defined as a SUVR equal or superior to 1.5.
Time frame: Baseline
histologic NED status of lesions
positive histology to synaptophysin
Time frame: Baseline
Pain score
Using a Brief Pain Index (BPI) questionnaire. The severity can be expressed through 4 aspects: worst, least, average and now. The pain interference with daily activities can be represented with 7 aspects: general activity, walking, work, mood, enjoyment of life, relationships and sleep.
Time frame: Baseline and 3-months post-enrolment
Physical function
Using EQ5D questionnaire which use a 5-scale and evaluates 5 aspects: mobility, selfcare, activity, pain, anxiety and global self-evaluation.
Time frame: Baseline and 3-months post-enrolment
Disease-associated symptoms
using FACT-P questionnaire: with subscale specific for wellbeing on physical, social/family, emotional functional and prostate aspects.
Time frame: Baseline and 3-months post-enrolment
PET-tracer uptake derived parameters
such as SUVmax, SUV mean, sum of SUVmax
Time frame: Baseline
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