The aim is to define the postponement of next line systemic treatment (NEST), by the use of metastasis-directed therapy in patients with oligoprogressive castration-refractory prostate cancer. This will be defined by the NEST-free survival. Furthermore the investigators will use 18F PSMA PET-CT as investigational imaging, to assess the predictive value and impact on treatment policy.
When treatment with pADT is initiated in case of mHSPC, the sensitivity to castration will eventually disappear due to the out-selection of castration-refractory clones. At that moment, the stage of mCRPC is attained. In the setting of mCRPC, clinical and iconographic progression (and to a lesser extent biochemical progression) traditionally implies a switch to a next-line systemic treatment (NEST). However, within the group of these progressive patients, there is a subgroup showing oligoprogressive disease, which is defined as the progression of a limited number of metastatic spots, whereas the majority of metastases is controlled by the systemic therapy the patient is receiving at that time. This heterogeneous response to treatment reflects the heterogeneity of the clonogenic cells that give rise to mCRPC. The hypothesis of this trial is that treatment with MDT of these oligoprogressive lesions allow patients to remain on their current systemic therapy, thereby delaying the need for NEST. A multicentric retrospective chart analysis on MDT for oligoprogressive CRPC has been conductedat previously the UZ Leuven together with UZ Gent (doi: 10.1016/j.euo.2019.08.012.). A total of 30 patients with oligoprogressive CRPC were selected for further analysis. In this population, after a median follow-up of 17 months (IQR 9;25), the median NEST-FS in the MDT group was 16 months (95% CI: 10-22 months). The median progression free survival (PFS) was 10 months (95% CI: 6-15 months). Subsequently, the investigators selected within the MDT group those cases who received SBRT or surgery (metastasectomy), as these patients will be the subjects in this phase 2 trial. There was a median NEST-free survival of 21 months (CI 95% 12-21 months) and a median PFS of 10 months (95% CI: 6-14 months). SBRT or surgery-related toxicity was minor, with limited grade 1 and 2 toxicity and only one patient experiencing late grade 3 GU/GI toxicity after treatment for local relapse in the prostate. These findings of this retrospective analysis clearly show the need for further prospective investigation. Therefore, this prospective phase 2 trial was initiated in patients with oligoprogressive mCRPC who will receive MDT. If the primary tumor has not been treated yet, local treatment will be added. Ongoing systemic treatment will be continued until progression. The trial is explorative and still hypothesis generating. The results from this trial will serve as a guidance for a randomized phase 3 trial in the near future.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
18
Metastasis-directed therapy (surgery and/or radiotherapy) as treatment for oligoprogressive lesions
Gert De Meerleer
Leuven, Belgium
Next-line Systemic Treatment - free survival (NEST-FS)
Time until the start with a subsequent systemic treatment line calculated from the last day of MDT until the first day of NEST or death (whichever comes first)
Time frame: up to 5 years after MDT
PSMA PET-CT accuracy and predictive value
We will evaluate if (1) at time of PSA progression, new lesions will be visible on PSMA PET-CT and not on conventional imaging or visible on both, (2) if those new lesions at time of radiographic progression were already visible as active lesions on PSMA PET-CT (and not on conventional imaging) at time of inclusion, and (3) we will evaluate if active lesions visible at PSMA PET-CT at initial diagnosis of oligoprogression/at time of inclusion, who are not visible on conventional imaging might disappear without targetet treatment. We will evaluate if PSMA PET-CT would result in a change of patient management.
Time frame: up to 5 years after MDT
PSA response
A decline in PSA value ≥ 50% from baseline confirmed by a second value ≥ 4 weeks. Individual PSA change responses as a percentage change from baseline to week 12 will be plotted in a waterfall plot.
Time frame: up to 5 years after MDT
Clinical progression-free survival (cPFS)
Progression is defined as the appearance of any recurrence (local, nodal or metastatic) on conventional imaging.
Time frame: up to 5 years after MDT
Cancer-specific survival (CSS)
CSS is calculated from last day of treatment until PCa death
Time frame: up to 10 years after MDT
Overall survival (OS)
Overall survival (OS) will be calculated from last day of treatment until death from any cause.
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Time frame: up to 10 years after MDT
Acute and late toxicity (in case of radiotherapy)
Acute and late toxicity as a result of radiotherapy will be scored using the Common Toxicity Criteria Version 5.0 (24).
Time frame: up to 5 years after MDT
Surgical complications (in case of surgery)
Surgical complications will be scored using Clavien-Dindo Classification (25) Toxicity will be scored at every follow-up visit.
Time frame: up to 5 years after MDT
Quality-of-life (QOL)
Quality of life scoring using the EORTC QLQ-30 supplemented with QLQ-PR25. We will assess the quality-of-life-years with the EuroQOL classification system (EQ-5D). Assessments are planned at baseline, last day of treatment, and during every follow-up consultation.
Time frame: up to 5 years after MDT