Prostate Cancer Clinical Trial
Chemotherapy After Prostatectomy (CAP) For High Risk Prostate Carcinoma
Summary
VA Cooperative Study #553 is designed to prospectively evaluate the efficacy of early adjuvant chemotherapy using docetaxel and prednisone added to the standard of care for patients who are potentially cured by radical prostatectomy but who are at high risk for relapse. The standard of care is surveillance, with the addition of androgen deprivation at the time of biochemical relapse. This study will assess the effect of adding early chemotherapy to the standard of care on progression free survival in Veterans at high risk for progression after prostatectomy.
Full Description
VA Cooperative Study #553 is designed to prospectively evaluate the efficacy of early adjuvant chemotherapy using docetaxel and prednisone added to the standard of care for patients who are potentially cured by radical prostatectomy but who are at high risk for relapse. The standard of care is surveillance, with the addition of androgen deprivation at the time of biochemical relapse. This study will assess the effect of adding early chemotherapy to the standard of care on progression free survival in Veterans at high risk for progression after prostatectomy.
The ability of radical prostatectomy to cure prostate cancer and to therefore prevent the morbidity and mortality associated with progression to metastatic disease depends on effectively treating both local and potential systemic disease. In the United States alone, over 80,000 men per year are treated with prostatectomy to cure their disease. Because 20% of these men will be found to have locally advanced or high-grade disease, they will be at risk for relapse and morbidity from their prostate cancer. Although androgen deprivation, radiation therapy, and chemotherapy have been considered potentially effective adjuvant modalities for localized prostate cancer, there are no randomized studies that support the utility of any of these treatments as a standard of care. Ultimately, it is androgen independent prostate cancer, which causes morbidity for these patients. Docetaxel based chemotherapy has been shown to prolong survival and induce responses in up to 80% of patients with androgen independent disease, generating enthusiasm for the use of chemotherapy early in the treatment of prostate cancer. This study is designed to test the value of adjuvant chemotherapy in improving progression free survival, which is critical in preventing morbidity and mortality from relapse in patients with clinically localized, but high risk, prostate cancer.
After patients are stratified for PSA, Gleason score, tumor stage, the presence of positive margins, and the planned use of adjuvant radiation therapy, this study will randomized 300 patients from 30 VA sites, after prostatectomy, to the standard of care or to docetaxel and prednisone administered every 3 weeks for 18 weeks. Patients would then be observed with PSA for a minimum of one and a maximum of five years. The study is designed with 90% power to detect a reduction in the 5-year progression rate from 60% to 45% (15% absolute difference, 25% relative difference).
At the end of the study period (October 31, 2012), the patients in the study will continue to be passively followed for three more years. The follow-up study involved centralized remote access of the participants' medical records to obtain information on PSA levels and study endpoints.
Prostate cancer is the leading cause of malignancy for Veterans, and the second leading cause of death. Patients with high risk, localized disease account for 70% of all cancer deaths in patients treated for cure with radical prostatectomy. Effective adjuvant therapy is critical to reducing suffering and death from prostate cancer. The VA Cooperative Studies Program is uniquely placed to address this question. The VA has a longstanding history of important studies in prostate cancer, which have significantly changed the way urologic oncologists treat patients with this disease. The incidence of prostate cancer in our older, male population is substantial, the number of Veterans treated with prostatectomy continues to rise, and the incidence of high risk prostate cancer in Veterans is greater than that typically found in the community. For all of these reasons, carrying out this study within the VA through the VA Cooperative Studies Program is the optimal way to determine whether adjuvant chemotherapy will benefit men with high risk prostate cancer.
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
A histologic diagnosis of cT1-T2 primary adenocarcinoma of the prostate prior to prostatectomy, with lymph node dissection at time of radical prostatectomy
One or more of the following poor prognostic features:
tumor extension to seminal vesicle (pT3b) or bladder neck (T4)
established extracapsular extension (pT3a) and Gleason Score >= 7
organ confined (pT2) with positive surgical margin and Gleason 8-10
preoperative PSA > 20
SWOG performance status 0-1
PSA nadir of <= 0.1 ng/ml up to 30 days prior to randomization. Patients must be randomized within 120 days after prostatectomy.
Laboratory values (no more than 30 days before randomization) must be as follows:
Absolute granulocyte count: >= 1,500/mm3
Platelets: >= 100,000/mm3
Hemoglobin: >= 10 g/dL
Serum Creatinine: <= 1.5 x ULN
AST: <= 1.5 x ULN
ALT: <= 1.5 x ULN
Serum Calcium: <= ULN
Total Bilirubin: <=ULN
Plasma Phosphorus Level: <= 6 mg/dl
Patients with preoperative PSA > 20 ng/mL must have a negative bone scan within 120 days of randomization
A valid, signed, and witnessed informed consent by the patient
Exclusion Criteria:
Small cell histology
N1 disease or M1 disease
Clinical T3 disease prior to prostatectomy
Any other investigational therapy
An active serious infection or other serious underlying medical condition that would otherwise impair their ability to receive protocol treatment
A history of cancer related hypercalcemia
Uncontrolled heart failure
Prior malignancy other than curatively treated squamous cell or basal cell carcinoma of the skin. If another malignancy has been treated and there is no evidence of relapse > 5 years from the time of treatment, patients are eligible
Androgen deprivation, chemotherapy, or radiation therapy to treat prostate carcinoma
Current peripheral neuropathy of any etiology that is greater than Grade I
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There are 34 Locations for this study
Birmingham Alabama, 35233, United States
Tucson Arizona, 85723, United States
North Little Rock Arkansas, 72114, United States
Long Beach California, 90822, United States
San Diego California, 92161, United States
San Francisco California, 94121, United States
West Los Angeles California, 90073, United States
West Haven Connecticut, 06516, United States
Gainesville Florida, 32608, United States
Miami Florida, 33125, United States
Tampa Florida, 33612, United States
Augusta Georgia, 30904, United States
Chicago Illinois, 60612, United States
Lexington Kentucky, 40502, United States
Shreveport Louisiana, 71101, United States
Ann Arbor Michigan, 48113, United States
Detroit Michigan, 48201, United States
Minneapolis Minnesota, 55417, United States
Jackson Mississippi, 39216, United States
Kansas City Missouri, 64128, United States
Albuquerque New Mexico, 87108, United States
Buffalo New York, 14215, United States
Durham North Carolina, 27705, United States
Portland Oregon, 97201, United States
Pittsburgh Pennsylvania, 15240, United States
Charleston South Carolina, 29401, United States
Memphis Tennessee, 38104, United States
Dallas Texas, 75216, United States
Houston Texas, 77030, United States
San Antonio Texas, 78229, United States
Salt Lake City Utah, 84148, United States
Seattle Washington, 98108, United States
Madison Wisconsin, 53705, United States
San Juan , 00921, Puerto Rico
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