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Comparative Effectiveness Analysis of Surgery and Radiation (CEASAR) for Localized Prostate Cancer

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Vanderbilt University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Prostate Cancer

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other
Other U.S. Federal agency

Identifiers

NCT01326286
1R01HS022640-01 (U.S. AHRQ Grant/Contract)
110299
CE grant (Other Identifier)
1R01HS019356-01 (U.S. AHRQ Grant/Contract)

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study will primarily compare the effectiveness of surgery and radiation for localized prostate cancer, the most common male cancer. It will focus on modern technologies and control for differences in patients and treatments that may affect both cancer-related and patient-reported outcomes (such as impotence and incontinence). By figuring out what treatments "work best, in which patients and in whose hands", it will help men with prostate cancer make better decisions regarding their care.

Full description

Prostate cancer is the most common solid tumor and the second leading cause of cancer death among American men. While surgery, radiation and observation have all been deemed appropriate for newly diagnosed men, tremendous uncertainty remains regarding the optimal treatment. AHRQ's 2008 evidence report on the comparative effectiveness of therapies for localized prostate cancer concluded that "no one therapy can be considered the preferred treatment for localized prostate cancer due to the limitations in the body of evidence as well as the likely tradeoffs an individual patient must make between estimated treatment effectiveness, necessity and adverse effects." The existing literature is limited by its focus on older therapeutic modalities and failure to control for individual patient characteristics and provider/hospital characteristics that may influence outcomes (quality of care). To fill these evidence gaps, we propose to expand a network of state tumor registries and a national observational disease registry to establish a new population-based cohort of men newly diagnosed with localized prostate cancer. We will prospectively measure key patient-reported outcomes, such as health-related quality of life and side-effects of therapy at diagnosis and 6 and 12 months later. We will also collect detailed medical record information, including clinical data, technical details of the interventions, complications, short-term cancer recurrence rates, and quality-of-care indicators.

By using this approach, we will overcome limitations of the extant literature and achieve the following specific aims:

  1. To compare the effectiveness of contemporary surgical and radiation techniques for localized prostate cancer in the cohort described above in terms of the 6- and 12-month patient-reported outcomes, side-effects and complications of treatment.
  2. To identify patient level characteristics that may influence comparative effectiveness.
  3. To assess how the comparative effectiveness of the various therapies varies by quality of care received.

Enrollment

3,265 patients

Sex

Male

Ages

18 to 79 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Pathologic diagnosis of adenocarcinoma of the prostate
  • Clinically localized stage
  • PSA <50ng/ml
  • age 18-79

Exclusion criteria

  • diagnosis of other malignancy (excluding squamous or basal cell carcinoma of the skin) within 3 years of diagnosis of prostate cancer
  • age 80 or greater
  • clinically locally advanced or metastatic disease
  • PSA equal to or greater than 50 ng/ml
  • pathologic diagnosis of prostate cancer greater than 6 months prior to baseline recruitment interview

Trial design

3,265 participants in 7 patient groups

Open Radical Prostatectomy
Description:
262
Robotic Radical Prostatectomy
Description:
1303
Intensity-Modulated Radiotherapy
Description:
638
Interstitial Brachytherapy
Description:
171
combined EBRT and Brachytherapy
Description:
143
Active Surveillance
Description:
448
Various other treatments
Description:
300

Trial contacts and locations

5

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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