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About
The purpose of this study is to see how long it takes for prostate cancer to come back in patients who have had surgery to remove their prostate gland (radical prostatectomy), while being treated with enzalutamide (formerly known as MDV3100).
Enzalutamide is known as an androgen-receptor signaling inhibitor, which means that it blocks activity of the male hormone, testosterone. Most prostate cancers are dependent on testosterone for growth. In this study, patients will take enzalutamide after surgery to see if it keeps their cancer from coming back.
Full description
This is a pilot phase II study evaluating the clinical activity and safety of Enzalutamide (formerly known as MDV3100) a novel androgen receptor (AR) inhibitor in men with high-risk prostate cancer who have undergone local definitive therapy with radical prostatectomy.
Primary Objectives:
-To evaluate the clinical efficacy of enzalutamide in patients with high-risk prostate cancer with regards to: Time to disease progression defined by biochemical recurrence (BCR)
Secondary Objectives:
-To further evaluate the safety of enzalutamide in patients with high-risk prostate cancer
Patients will receive daily oral therapy with enzalutamide at 160mg (4 capsules) orally once daily (QD). Patients will continue on study until progressive disease, drug intolerability, consent withdrawal or completion of study at 24 months.
Enrollment
Sex
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Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Understand and voluntarily sign an informed consent form.
Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) Performance Status of 0 or 1
Histologically confirmed adenocarcinoma of the prostate.
Patients must have undergone a Radical Prostatectomy (any surgical technique is permitted) within 3 months from study entry and have high-risk disease define by any of the following:
Able to swallow the study drug and comply with study requirements.
Patients must have normal organ and marrow function as defined below:
Exclusion criteria
Severe concurrent disease, infection, or co-morbidity that, in the judgment of the investigator, would make the patient inappropriate for enrollment
Prior radiotherapy to the prostate or pelvis (related to prostate cancer). Concurrent adjuvant radiation therapy is permitted once patient has been enrolled on trial.
Prior use of Abiraterone acetate or cytotoxic chemotherapy for prostate cancer
Prior androgen deprivation with Luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) is permitted provided that testosterone levels prior to study entry have recovered to normal limits per reference laboratory.
No prior anti-androgen therapy (bicalutamide, flutamide or Nilutamide) is permitted
Prior use of 5-alpha reductase inhibitors is permitted provided such medications were stopped 7-14 days prior to enrollment
Use of herbal products that may have hormonal anti-prostate cancer activity and/or are known to decrease PSA levels (e.g., saw palmetto) or systemic corticosteroids greater than the equivalent of 10 mg of prednisone per day within 2 weeks of enrollment
Active unresolved infection
Known history of central nervous system (CNS) metastases
Patients must have no known history of HIV
Evidence of metastatic disease as evidenced by a CT or MRI of abdomen and pelvis and/or whole body bone scan (WBS). To be done prior to treatment start and up to 4 months prior to radical prostatectomy date.
History of seizure or any condition that may predispose to seizure (e.g., prior cortical stroke, significant brain trauma). Also, history of loss of consciousness or transient ischemic attack within 12 months of enrollment.
Clinically significant cardiovascular disease including:
Gastrointestinal disorder affecting absorption (e.g., Gastrectomy, active peptic ulcer disease within last 3 months)
Any condition or reason that, in the opinion of the Investigator, interferes with the ability of the patient to participate in the trial, which places the patient at undue risk, or complicates the interpretation of safety data.
The effects of enzalutamide on the developing human fetus at the recommended therapeutic doses are unknown. Thus, men must agree to use adequate contraception (barrier method of birth control or abstinence) prior to study entry, for the duration of study participation, and for 6 months after the usage of enzalutamide. Should the patient's partner become pregnant or suspect she is pregnant while the patient is participating in this study, the patient should inform his treating physician immediately.
Primary purpose
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42 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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