| Literature DB >> 31850194 |
Benjamin A Greenberger1, Victor E Chen1, Robert B Den1.
Abstract
Despite the many prospective randomized trials that have been available in the past decade regarding the optimization of radiation, hormonal, and surgical therapies for high-risk prostate cancer (PCa), many questions remain. There is currently a lack of level I evidence regarding the relative efficacy of radical prostatectomy (RP) followed by adjuvant radiation compared to radiation therapy (RT) combined with androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) for high-risk PCa. Current retrospective series have also described an improvement in biochemical outcomes and PCa-specific mortality through the use of augmented radiation strategies incorporating brachytherapy. The relative efficacy of modern augmented RT compared to RP is still incompletely understood. We present a narrative review regarding recent advances in understanding regarding comparisons of overall and PCa-specific mortality measures among patients with high-risk PCa treated with either an RP/adjuvant RT or an RT/ADT approach. We give special consideration to recent trends toward the assembly of multi-institutional series targeted at providing high-quality data to minimize the effects of residual confounding. We also provide a narrative review of recent studies examining brachytherapy boost and systemic therapies, as well as an overview of currently planned and ongoing studies that will further elucidate strategies for treatment optimization over the next decade.Entities:
Keywords: clinically localized; high-risk; prostate neoplasms; prostatectomy; radiotherapy
Year: 2019 PMID: 31850194 PMCID: PMC6896415 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2019.01273
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Selected representative institutional studies of comparative effectiveness of radiotherapy and radical prostatectomy in high-risk prostate cancer.
| Randomized controlled trial | Lennernäs et al. ( | 89 patients, T1b–T3a, N0, M0 and PSA ≤ 50 ng/ml. All underwent total androgen blockade (6 months). RP vs. XRT + BT. | Self-reported HRQoL. | 10-year results | Limited sample size, lack of statistical power |
| Single or limited multi-institutional observational study | Zelefsky et al. ( | 2,380 pts (including 409 NCCN high-risk) with T1c-T3b PCa were treated with intensity-modulated XRT (≥81 Gy) or RP | Primary endpoint: distant metastasis. Secondary endpoint: PCM | 5-year results with 95% CI | Hazard ratios not reported for high-risk subset. 3–6 months ADT in 56% of patients. No adjuvant ADT in high-risk patients |
| Boorjian et al. ( | 1,847 NCCN high-risk patients, treated with RP or XRT with pelvic nodes included | Systemic progression, PCM, OM | 10-year PCM | 56% ADT utilization in XRT cohort, low radiation dose of median 72 Gy XRT | |
| Ciezki et al. ( | 2,557 NCCN high-risk patients, treated with RP or XRT (≥78Gy) or BT (LDR 144 Gy) | PCM, BF, clinical relapse | 5-year results | > 6-months duration of ADT in only 26% of patients with XRT | |
| Tilki et al. ( | 639 patients with Gleason 9–10 treated with RP ± adjuvant RT ± ADT or XRT + BT + ADT (median 6 months) | OM, PCM | 5-year PCM: 21.89% (RP), 3.93% (RP + XRT), 9.83% MaxRP, 27.04% RP + ADT | Surgery and RT comparison cohorts at geographically different centers | |
| Reichard et al. ( | 304 patients with NCCN high-risk or very-high-risk treated with RP or XRT + ADT | BF, DM, OM, LF | 5-year OM | Limited patient number to assess OM or PCM endpoints; only 3.9% of RP patients received adjuvant RT, no PCM reported |
BF, biochemical failure; BT, brachytherapy; DM, distant metastases; Gy, gray; HR, hazard ratio; HRQoL, health-related quality of life; LDR, low-dose-rate; MaxRP, RP followed by adjuvant radiation within 1 year; MaxRT, XRT + brachytherapy ± ADT; OM, overall mortality; NS, not significant; PCM, prostate cancer-specific mortality; PSA, prostate-specific antigen; XRT, external beam radiation therapy.
Selected clinical trials studying various therapies including systemic, surgical, and radiation interventions in high-risk prostate cancer.
| NCT03477864 | 1 | Stereotactic body radiation therapy with REGN2810 and/or ipilimumab before surgery in treating participants with progressive advanced or oligometastatic prostate cancer | Active | Anti-PD1 monoclonal antibody (REGN2810) vs. intraprostatic ipilimumab vs. a combination of both, followed by SBRT + RP |
| NCT02023463 | 1 | Enzalutamide, radiation therapy, and hormone therapy in treating patients with intermediate or high-risk prostate cancer | No longer recruiting | Enzalutamide + LHRH agonist with goserelin or leuprolide, followed by RT and additional LHRH agonist |
| NCT03177460 | 1 | Daratumumab or FMS inhibitor JNJ-40346527 before surgery in treating patients with high-risk, resectable localized or locally advanced prostate cancer | Active | Daratumumab (CD38 antagonist) vs. FMS inhibitor JNJ-40346527(CSF-1R tyrosine kinase inhibitor) followed by RP |
| NCT00099086 | 1 | Docetaxel, radiation therapy, and hormone therapy in treating patients with locally advanced prostate cancer | No longer recruiting | RT + bicalutamide and GnRH analog prior to, during, and after RT + concurrent docetaxel |
| NCT03821246 | 2 | Neoadjuvant atezolizumab with or without enzalutamide in localized prostate cancer given before radical prostatectomy | Active | Atezolizumab alone vs. in combination with enzalutamide or in combination with emactuzumab, followed by RP |
| NCT02506114 | 2 | Neoadjuvant PROSTVAC-VF with or without ipilimumab for prostate cancer | Active | PROSTVAC-VF (PSA-based immunization) ± ipilimumab, followed by RP |
| NCT02508636 | 2 | Trial of radiotherapy with leuprolide and enzalutamide in high-risk prostate | No longer | Definitive RT + Leuprolide + Enzalutamide |
| NCT02772588 | 2 | AASUR in high-risk prostate cancer | Active | Leuprolide + Abiraterone + apalutamide + SBRT |
| NCT02903368 | 2 | Neoadjuvant and adjuvant abiraterone acetate + apalutamide prostate cancer undergoing prostatectomy | No longer recruiting | Abiraterone, leuprolide, prednisone ± apalutamide, followed by RP. Adjuvant abiraterone, apalutamide, leuprolide, prednisone vs. no adjuvant therapy. |
| NCT03436654 | 2 | Multi-arm multi-modality therapy for very high-risk localized and low volume metastatic prostatic adenocarcinoma | Active | Apalutamide ± (Abiraterone and prednisone) followed by RP, pelvic lymphadenectomy, GnRH agonist/antagonist |
| NCT03432780 | 2 | Radiation-hormone and docetaxel vs. radiation-hormone in patients with high-risk localized prostate cancer (QRT-SOGUG) | No longer recruiting | RT + hormone therapy ± weekly docetaxel |
| NCT01385059 | 2 | Axitinib before surgery in treating patients with high-risk prostate cancer | No longer | Axitinib for 28 days vs. no therapy followed by RP and pelvic lymph node dissection |
| NCT02849990 | 2 | A phase II neoadjuvant study of apalutamide, abiraterone acetate, prednisone, degarelix and indomethacin in men with localized prostate cancer pre-prostatectomy | No longer | Apalutamide, abiraterone, prednisone, degarelix, indomethacin followed by RP |
| NCT03899987 | 2 | Aspirin and rintatolimod with or without interferon-alpha 2b in treating patients with prostate cancer before surgery | Active | Aspirin + rintatolimod ± recombinant interferon alpha-2b followed by RP vs. RP alone |
| NCT02949284 | 2 | Androgen receptor antagonist ARN-509 with or without abiraterone acetate, gonadotropin-releasing hormone analog, and prednisone in treating patients with high-risk prostate cancer undergoing surgery | Active | Apalutamide ± (abiraterone acetate, GnRH agonist, prednisone) followed by RP vs. RP alone |
| NCT01409200 | 2 | Antiandrogen therapy with or without axitinib before surgery in treating patients with previously untreated prostate cancer with known or suspected lymph node metastasis | No longer | ADT + axitinib followed by RP and pelvic lymph node dissection vs. ADT alone followed by RP and pelvic lymph node dissection |
| NCT01546987 | 3 | Hormone therapy, radiation therapy, and steroid 17alpha-monooxygenase TAK-700 in treating patients with high-risk prostate cancer | No longer | ADT + GnRH agonist + RT ± TAK-700 (steroid 17alpha-monooxygenase) |
| NCT03767244 | 3 | A study of apalutamide in participants with high-risk, localized or locally advanced prostate cancer who are candidates for radical prostatectomy (PROTEUS) | Active | ADT + apalutamide OR placebo, followed by RP, followed by adjuvant ADT + apalutamide OR placebo |
| NCT00288080 | 3 | Hormone therapy and radiation therapy or hormone therapy and radiation therapy followed by docetaxel and prednisone in treating patients with localized prostate cancer | No longer | Androgen suppression with LHRH agonist + oral anti-androgen prior to and concurrent with RT, followed by adjuvant LHRH agonist ± docetaxel x six cycles |
| NCT00430183 | 3 | Surgery with or without docetaxel and leuprolide or goserelin in treating patients with high-risk localized prostate cancer | No longer | Docetaxel + LHRH agonist + surgery vs. surgery alone |
| NCT00007644 | 3 | Prostate cancer intervention vs. observation trial (PIVOT) | Results published; pending long-term results actual enrollment: 731 two arms | RP vs. observation |
| N/A | 3 | Radical prostatectomy or watchful waiting in early prostate cancer (SPCG-4) | Results published; pending long-term results actual enrollment: 695 two arms | Watchful waiting vs. RP |
| NCT02102477 | 3 | Surgery vs. radiotherapy for locally advanced prostate cancer (SPCG-15) | Active | RP ± adjuvant or salvage RT, vs. RT with adjuvant ADT |
| NCT02830165 | 1 | Stereotactic body radiation therapy in treating patients with high-risk prostate cancer undergoing surgery | Active | SBRT given over three fractions ~2–4 weeks prior to RP |
| NCT02346253 | 1 | 2 | High-dose brachytherapy in treating patients with prostate cancer | Active | High-dose brachytherapy over two fractions + ADT |
| NCT00951535 | 2 | A prospective phase II dose-escalation study using IMRT for high-risk N0 M0 prostate cancer. ICORG 08-17 | No longer | Dose-escalation study from baseline of 75.6 Gy up to a maximum of 81 Gy, depending on volume constraints |
| NCT01368588 | 3 | Androgen-deprivation therapy and radiation therapy in treating patients with prostate cancer (RTOG 0924) | No longer recruiting | RT to prostate and seminal vesicles alone vs. whole-pelvis RT |
| NCT00967863 | 3 | Radiation therapy in treating patients receiving hormone therapy for prostate cancer (GETUG-AFU 18) | No longer | RT to 80 Gy vs. to 70 Gy given in conjunction with ADT |
| NCT00667888 | 3 | A phase III intensity radiotherapy dose-escalation for prostate cancer using hypofractionation | No longer | RT to 75.6 Gy in 42 fractions vs. RT to 72 Gy in 30 fractions |
| NCT03514927 | 2 | High-intensity focused ultrasound in treating participants with intermediate and high-risk prostate cancer | Active | High-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) followed by RP |
ADT, androgen deprivation therapy; Gy, gray; IMRT, intensity-modulated radiation therapy; LHRH, Luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone; PSA, prostate-specific antigen; RP, radical prostatectomy; RT, radiation therapy; SBRT, stereotactic body radiotherapy.
Selected population-based database studies comparing survival endpoints for prostatectomy vs. radiotherapy.
| Hoffman et al. ( | PCOS/SEER (1994–2010) | 1,655, including 437 high-risk (PSA > 10 or Gleason ≥ 8) treated with RP or XRT | High-risk results: RP was associated with statistically significant advantages for OM: HR 0.65 (95% CI 0.48–0.87), and PCM: HR: 0.36 (95% CI 0.20–0.64) | ADT duration |
| Sooriakumaran et al. ( | PcBaSe Sweden (1996–2010) | 32,846 including 7649 modified NCCN high-risk | HR for PCM favors RP over RT: HR = 1.50 (95% CI 1.19–1.88) | ADT use/duration |
| Ennis et al. ( | NCDB (2004–2013) | Clinically localized, NCCN high-risk who received RP or XRT + ADT or XRT + BT ± ADT | No difference in OM between RP and XRT + BT, XRT/ADT associated with higher mortality than RP (HR, 1.53; 95% CI, 1.22–1.92). | |
| Jang et al. ( | SEER-Medicare (1992–2009) | T3-T4N0M0 or T3-T4N1M0, age ≥65 treated with RP/adjuvant XRT or XRT/ADT | 10-year PCM and OM favored men who underwent RP + XRT over men who underwent XRT + ADT | RT dose; |
| Muralidhar et al. ( | NCDB and SEER (2004–2012 for NCDB and SEER) | cT1-T3N0M0, Gleason 9–10, PSA 0–40 ng/ml treated with XRT + BT or RP + ART | NCDB: No difference in 5-year OM between RP + ART vs. XRT + BT (HR 1.10, 95% CI 0.95–1.27) | Limitations as above for SEER and NCDB studies |
ADT, androgen deprivation therapy; ART, adjuvant radiation therapy; BT, brachytherapy; HR, hazard ratio; OM, overall mortality; NCCN, National Comprehensive Cancer Network; NCDB, National Cancer Database; PCM, prostate cancer-specific mortality; PSA, prostate-specific antigen; SEER, Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results; XRT, external beam radiation therapy.
Selected meta-analyses comparing prostate cancer-specific mortality and overall mortality between radical prostatectomy and radiation therapy.
| Wallis et al. ( | Meta-analysis of 19 studies of low to moderate risk of bias (Newcastle-Ottawa used for assessment), up to 118,830 pooled patients | Worse OM (aHR = 1.63) and PCM (aHR = 2.08) with RT compared with RP | Residual confounding, limited quality control regarding adequacy of ADT, RT dose in included studies |
| Roach et al. ( | Meta-analysis of 14 studies. Stratified studies by use of “reliability score” incorporating comorbidity adjustment, ADT quality, and study size | 10-year OM and PCM favored RP over RT, by 10 and 4%, respectively. Higher “reliability” associated with differences of 5.5 and 1%, respectively. | Residual confounding, use of unvalidated “reliability score” based on somewhat subjective criteria to stratify included studies |
ADT, androgen deprivation therapy; OM, overall mortality; PCM, prostate cancer-specific mortality; RP, radical prostatectomy; RT, radiation therapy.
Multi-institutional registry studies.
| Kibel: Barnes-Jewish Hospital and Cleveland Clinic (1995–2005) ( | Clinically localized disease; general cohort of 10,429 including 1,234 D'Amico high-risk patients | XRT/ADT or BT vs. RP | Worse OM with XRT/ADT (HR, 1.7; 95% CI, 1.3–2.3) or BT (HR, 3.1; 95% CI, 1.7–5.9) compared with RP, though no detectable difference in PCM in high-risk subset |
| Westover: 21st Century Oncology, Chicago Prostate Center, Duke University (1988–2008) ( | Clinically localized, Gleason 8–10, age <75 | XRT + BT vs. RP | No detectable difference in PCM, i.e., PCM for RP not detected as worse than CMT (HR, 1.8; 95% CI, 0.6–5.6) |
| Kishan: 12 tertiary centers (11 in the United States, 1 in Norway) from 2000 to 2013 ( | Gleason 9–10, clinically localized disease | XRT + BT (MaxRT) vs. RP | Improved OM and PCM with MaxRT compared with RP |
ADT, androgen deprivation therapy; BT, brachytherapy; CMT, combined modality therapy; Gy, gray; MaxRT, combination external beam radiation therapy and brachytherapy ± ADT; OM, overall mortality; PCM, prostate cancer-specific mortality; RP, radical prostatectomy; RT, radiation therapy; XRT, external beam RT.