Interim analysis of companion, prospective, phase II, clinical trials assessing the efficacy and safety of multi-modal total eradication therapy in men with synchronous oligometastatic prostate cancer

Diane K. Reyes, Bruce J. Trock, Phuoc T. Tran, Christian P. Pavlovich, Curtiland Deville, Mohamad E. Allaf, Stephen C. Greco, Daniel Y. Song, Trinity J. Bivalacqua, Misop Han, Alan W. Partin, A. Oliver Sartor, Steven P. Rowe, Kenneth J. Pienta

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Multimodal therapies were combined to eradicate the primary site, metastatic, and micrometastatic disease in men with newly diagnosed, synchronous, oligometastatic prostate cancer. The investigation included companion, phase II studies: total eradication therapy-1 (TET-1) for those treatment-naïve and total eradication therapy-2 (TET-2) for those post-prostatectomy. The treatment-naive protocol included androgen deprivation and docetaxel (with concurrent abiraterone added in a protocol amendment), followed by a prostatectomy, adjuvant radiation (if positive margins, T3/4, or detectable PSA), and metastasis-directed therapy. The post-prostatectomy protocol assigned the same therapies (omitting the prostatectomy). The primary endpoint was an undetectable PSA with recovered testosterone. The safety boundaries were ≤ 50% for grade 3/4 neutropenic and ≤ 20% for grade 3/4 surgical- and radiation-related toxicities. Enrollment was planned for 60 patients per protocol, to detect a PSA progression-free survival ≥ 32%, as compared to 15% in a historic control. Enrollment closed early. An interim analysis was conducted once > 50% of patients were evaluable for the primary endpoint. The primary endpoint duration was assessed by median progression-free survival. 52 patients were enrolled (n = 26 per protocol). Medium follow-up was 30.3 months. 80% (24/30) of evaluable patients achieved the primary endpoint; the duration was not reached. Of those not evaluable, 77% (17/22) had not reached the endpoint and 23% (5/22) had exited. There were 8% (4/52) grade 3/4 neutropenic and 2% (1/48) grade 3/4 surgical or radiation-induced toxicities. Interim findings suggest the trials’ endpoints were met, advancing the concept of total eradication therapy in men with oligometastatic prostate cancer.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number63
JournalMedical Oncology
Volume39
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - May 2022

Keywords

  • Multi-modal therapy
  • Oligometastatic prostate cancer
  • Total eradication therapy

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Hematology
  • Oncology
  • Cancer Research

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