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Despite improvements in treatment, metastatic prostate cancer remains incurable, especially in the case of pretreated metastatic castration-resistant disease (mCRPC), where treatment options are limited, leading to an unmet need. The paradigm shift in the treatment of metastatic hormone-sensitive prostate cancer (mHSPC) has affected the treatment landscape for mCRPC patients. Many have already received androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) and androgen receptor pathway inhibitors (ARPI), making first-line mCRPC treatment challenging.
The Swiss Group for Clinical Cancer Research (SAKK) has shown in previous studies that maintenance treatment with an ARPI, such as darolutamide, can improve radiographic progression-free survival (rPFS) in pretreated mCRPC patients. In the SAKK 08/16 trial, darolutamide maintenance was found to prolong PFS compared to placebo, especially in patients who responded well to prior ARPI treatment.
Based on these findings, the hypothesis is that continued AR-pathway blockade with darolutamide, initiated in patients progressing from mHSPC to mCRPC on ARPI treatment, can improve outcomes when added to standard first-line mCRPC therapy and continued as maintenance. The proposed study aims to evaluate the efficacy of darolutamide, combined with physician-choice standard of care (including taxane chemotherapy, olaparib, radium 223, or LuPSMA), followed by maintenance therapy, on rPFS for patients in the first-line setting of mCRPC.
Full description
Metastatic prostate cancer remains incurable despite several major improvements in the treatment. In the case of pretreated metastatic castration-resistant disease (mCRPC) the options remain scarce and there is still an unmet need in this patient population.
For the majority of patients with metastatic hormone-sensitive prostate cancer (mHSPC) the combination of androgen deprivation (ADT) and ARPI (or even a triplet treatment with ADT, docetaxel and darolutamide or abiraterone) has become standard of care. However, when patients become metastatic castration resistant (mCRPC) over time a change of systemic treatment is necessary and thus this paradigm switch in treatment of mHSPC has had a major impact on treatment of mCRPC patients. Many patients developing metastatic castration-resistant disease these days have not only received ADT but also an ARPI and, in some cases, also docetaxel. Therefore, the treatment options in the first line setting of mCRPC are restricted and the outcome is poorer compared to the past. Improvement of first line mCRPC is an important unmet clinical need.
The SAKK has demonstrated in two earlier studies that maintenance treatment with an ARPI (orteronel in SAKK 08/11 or darolutamide in SAKK 08/16) can improve radiographic progression-free survival in pretreated mCRPC patients after ARPI and/or taxane based. This maintenance concept could be introduced more generally in the first line setting of mCRPC.
In the SAKK 08/16 trial, darolutamide maintenance was shown to prolong progression-free survival (PFS) compared to placebo, in patients with mCRPC who had received prior ARPI, and whose disease did not progress during taxane therapy. This benefit was more pronounced in patients with prior response to ARPI.
Taken together it is hypothesized that the continued AR-pathway blockade with darolutamide in patients progressing from mHSPC to mCRPC on ARPI treatment can improve outcome when it is added to a standard first line mCRPC therapy and then continued as maintenance. SAKK proposes to add the ARPI darolutamide to standard first line mCRPC treatment consisting of either taxane chemotherapy (docetaxel or cabazitaxel), olaparib, radium 223 or LuPSMA. The choice of standard of care treatment is up to the investigator, respecting the country specific approvals. Darolutamide will be given concomitantly with the chosen first line treatment and will be continued as maintenance afterwards until radiographic progression.
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Inclusion criteria
Written informed consent according to Swiss law and ICH GCP E6(R2) regulations before registration and prior to any trial specific procedures
Histologically or cytologically confirmed diagnosis of adenocarcinoma of the prostate
Castration resistance: tumor progression after orchiectomy or during treatment with GnRH analogues (agonists or antagonists).
Non-surgically castrated patient agrees on ongoing use of GnRH analogues (agonists or antagonists) during the trial
Metastatic disease, documented by imaging according to PCWG3 criteria
Measurable disease or bone lesions that are evaluable according to PCWG3 criteria
One line of previous ARPI therapy (abiraterone, enzalutamide, darolutamide, apalutamide) for at least 18 months within mHSPC setting, showing an at least 50% PSA response or partial remission according to RECIST v1.1
Progressive disease according to PCWG3 before registration is defined as (at least 2 out of 3):
Patients with a previously treated malignancy are eligible, when the risk of the prior malignancy interfering with either safety or efficacy endpoints is very low
Age ≥ 18 years
WHO performance status 0-2
Adequate bone marrow function: absolute neutrophil count ≥ 1.0 x 109/L, platelet count ≥ 100 x 109/L, hemoglobin ≥ 90 g/L.
Adequate hepatic function: total bilirubin ≤ 1.5 x ULN (except for patients with Gilbert's disease ≤ 3.0 x ULN), ALT and AST ≤ 2.5 x ULN, or ≤ 5 x ULN under the assumption that abnormal values are a result of cancer
Adequate renal function: estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) > 30 mL/min/1.73 m2 (according to CKD-EPI formula)
Men agree not to donate sperm or to father a child during trial treatment and until 3 months after the last dose of trial treatment
Patients are able and willing to swallow darolutamide as whole tablet.
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162 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Simone Rahel Wyss-Neyer
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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