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Assessment of Bone Loss in Men Receiving Treatment for Prostate Cancer (ANTELOPE)

P

Prof Janet Brown

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Prostate Cancer

Treatments

Other: Comprehensive bone health assessment

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02785627
STH18645

Details and patient eligibility

About

The ANTELOPE trial is a longitudinal observational clinical study of changes in bone density, structure and strength over 12 months in men receiving treatment for prostate cancer. Three groups (n = 30 per group) will be compared, with bone assessments at baseline and 12 months. Allowing for a 18 month recruitment period, 12 months follow-up and data analysis, the total study length will be 3 years. The groups comprise:

Group A - Men with prostate cancer starting ADT

Group B - Men with newly diagnosed hormone sensitive metastatic prostate cancer, about to start (or have started within the past 3 months) ADT and who will undergo chemotherapy with docetaxel and prednisolone

Group C - Age-matched men without prostate cancer

Full description

Prostate cancer is the commonest non-skin cancer in men, with more than 40,000 new cases diagnosed in the UK each year. Development of prostate cancer depends upon testosterone (the male hormone), and medications that block testosterone (eg Androgen Deprivation Therapy, ADT) can help men to survive for many years. Men with metastatic prostate cancer are also treated with ADT, but recent evidence has demonstrated that there are survival benefits when chemotherapy given as well as ADT. Many patients now receive chemotherapy as first line treatment along with ADT in the context of newly diagnosed metastatic disease.

However, blocking testosterone causes bone loss which may lead to osteoporosis and increases the risk of osteoporotic fracture. Such fractures cause pain, loss of mobility and independence, and one in three men who have a hip fracture will die within one year. The osteoporosis caused by prostate cancer treatments may differ from other forms; the limited available data suggest that it may affect the wrist more than other bones (most other forms affect the spine and hip the most). We need to better understand the pattern of osteoporosis in these men, so that we can offer the most effective treatment to protect their bones and ensure that they stay as well as possible as they live with their cancer treatment

The aim of this study is to determine the effect of prostate cancer treatment on bone health. Comprehensive bone assessment at baseline and 12 months will include different bone scans (DXA whole body, Xtreme CT of radius and HR CT T12 vertebra), biochemical markers of bone turnover, anthropometric measurements, and assessment of grip strength and muscle strength and function.

Enrollment

90 estimated patients

Sex

Male

Ages

50 to 80 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

All participants

  • Men aged 50-80 years old, WHO performance status ≤2.
  • Have provided written informed consent prior to any trial-specific procedures
  • Able and willing to comply with the terms of the protocol and to undertake the trial assessments
  • Body Mass Index (kg/m2) >18.5 and <35.0
  • No evidence of significantly abnormal organ function on standard laboratory testing

Group A

  • Histological confirmation of prostate cancer
  • No indication of metastatic disease
  • Scheduled to commence ADT (but must have baseline assessments carried out within 4 weeks of commencement of ADT). Those starting ADT are expecting to have a duration of treatment of 12 months or more.
  • No prior systemic therapy for advanced prostate cancer (not receiving concurrent anti-neoplastic therapy, besides ADT or an anti-androgens), participants may have received radiotherapy or may receive this during the study period

Group B

  • Men with newly diagnosed hormone sensitive metastatic prostate cancer who have commenced ADT and who have been referred for chemotherapy
  • Bone metastases will be allowed provided not in the radius (DXA measurement will attempt to image sites with no/minimal bone metastases)
  • Men who have received palliative radiotherapy for known bone metastases prior to or during the study may be included, but the site of radiotherapy must be accurately recorded and attempts will be made to avoid such sites in subsequent DXA measurement.
  • Men with bone pain due to known bone metastases may receive necessary analgaesia, including opiates, as needed on study
  • Participants in group B will be allowed to continue oral corticosteroids, provided that the dose does not exceed 2mg dexamethasone or 10 mg prednisolone daily. Men in this group may also receive additional steroids as prophylaxis during chemotherapy.

Group C

• Men that do not have a diagnosis of prostate cancer

Exclusion criteria

  • Known metabolic bone disease or other diseases (other than prostate cancer) known to affect bone metabolism including: hyperthyroidism, primary hyperparathyroidism, chronic liver disease, rheumatoid arthritis, inflammatory bowel disease or malabsorption

    • Medications (in addition to ADT) known to affect bone metabolism including osteoporosis treatments and anti-epileptics
    • Previous hormone treatments within 1 month (other than ADT in Groups A and B)
    • Any concurrent or recent other invasive cancer that could confuse diagnosis or endpoints. Allowed situations include, but are not limited to, non-melanoma skin cancer, superficial bladder cancer (if in doubt please discuss with trial team).
    • Fracture or orthopaedic surgery within the last 12 months
    • Arthritis, orthopaedic surgery or other abnormality of the radius, spine or hip which would prevent accurate acquisition of study measurements.
    • Current or prior (within one month) participation in any other clinical trial involving a medicinal product, except STAMPEDE for men in group B. For other trial, please consult trial team.
    • For Group B, those on bisphosphonates or alpha-radon on study entry are excluded (but please see separate advice on Pg 19 for men who need to go on bisphosphonates or alpha-radon whilst on study).
    • Groups A and C: Men taking oral systemic corticosteroids (inhaled steroids will be permitted). In Group B oral corticosteroids are permitted, provided that the dose does not exceed 2mg dexamethasone or 10mg prednisolone daily. Those in group B may also receive additional steroids given as prophylaxis alongside chemotherapy

Trial design

90 participants in 3 patient groups

Group A: ADT
Description:
Men with non-metastatic prostate cancer, about to start or within 2 weeks of starting ADT
Treatment:
Other: Comprehensive bone health assessment
Group B: ADT + chemotherapy
Description:
Men with newly diagnosed hormone sensitive metastatic prostate cancer, starting ADT and who will have chemotherapy
Treatment:
Other: Comprehensive bone health assessment
Group C: Controls
Description:
Healthy age matched men
Treatment:
Other: Comprehensive bone health assessment

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Catherine Handforth, MBChB; Janet E Brown, MBBS MD FRCP

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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