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Evaluating the Effects of Frozen Section Technology on Oncological and Functional Outcomes At Radical Prostatectomy. (NeuroSAFEPROOF)

University College London (UCL) logo

University College London (UCL)

Status

Active, not recruiting

Conditions

Prostate Cancer

Treatments

Procedure: NeuroSAFE procedure
Procedure: Standard RARP

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03317990
17/0443 (Other Grant/Funding Number)
220262

Details and patient eligibility

About

In summary this trial will test whether this new surgical technique can be used to make surgery safer and more effective whilst allowing improved quality of life for patients having surgery for prostate cancer. If the technique is proven effective the investigators will use the experience gained to promote its use throughout the NHS through training courses and publication and dissemination of the resultant data. Staff from centres participating in this trial will be fully trained in the NeuroSAFE technique.

A patient and public involvement afternoon was held for participants of the NeuroSAFE PROOF feasibility study, family members, men with prostate cancer, and staff members at UCLH. The event was supported by the charity Orchid Cancer appeal. The high levels of attendance was demonstrative of the support within our patient group for the work of this trial. The trial team listened to the comments made by participants and members of the public and have made some changes to the design of our trial as a result of this feedback.

Full description

Prostate cancer is very common and results in the death of many men in the developed world. Prostate cancer that has not spread outside the prostate can usually be cured by surgical removal of the prostate gland (radical prostatectomy).

Radical Prostatectomy can be associated with urinary incontinence due to damage to the involuntary sphincter and erectile dysfunction due to damage of the nerves that run within the outer coverings of the prostate. Surgical sparing of these nerves to preserve quality of life may risk leaving cancer cells behind often meaning that the patients need extra treatment with radiotherapy. This trial is designed to evaluate a new method designed to decrease the risk of compromising cancer control associated with sparing of the nerves as well as evaluate effects on the need for radiotherapy after surgery if cancer is left behind. The Investigators will also evaluate effects on the quality of life in patients who have undergone RARP. The trial is needed now because the nature of prostate cancers treated surgically is changing rapidly. The techniques developed in low risk cancer to spare the nerves which run alongside the prostate, may not necessarily be safe when used on the more aggressive cancers operated on nowadays and if they are adopted without adequate investigation, the risk is that patients will be exposed to increased risk of cancer recurrence and needing extra treatment with radiotherapy with consequent side effects and extra cost to the NHS.

On the outside of the prostate, within its outermost coverings, run the nerves thought to be responsible for producing erections. Preservation of these nerves has also been linked to more rapid reestablishment of urinary continence following surgical removal of the prostate. Robotic technology has been developed which allows the prostate to be removed through very small incisions. The surgeons view is magnified in 3D, which facilitates the peeling off of the outer layers, containing the nerves (so called nerve sparing). With nerve sparing the nerves controlling erections are left intact whilst the prostate itself, along with the cancer within it, is removed.

This increases the patient's chances of getting erections of sufficient quality for penetrative sex. Data from several case series, including our own, suggest that the higher the degree of nerve sparing performed, the more likely a patient is to be potent and continent of urine. In our series, bilateral nerve sparing results in 85% of men being able to get usable erections*, whereas only 45% of men will have useable erections* when only one side is spared.

Nerve sparing has largely been developed and the effects have been evaluated in the USA where prostate cancer is detected at an earlier stage because PSA screening is performed commonly. In the UK, where PSA screening is not commonly carried out, tumours resected at surgery are larger and more aggressive, often having spread through the capsule of the prostate. In addition, the move away from surgery for small low-grade tumours in the UK means that the prostate cancers treated by surgery are larger and more aggressive overall. This means that the tumours are closer to the outer limit of the prostate because the more aggressive tumours tend to work their way out through the outer capsule of the prostate. A nerve sparing approach is associated with an increased risk that tumour will be left on the surface of the resected specimen. This is referred to as a positive surgical margin (PSM). One of the principles of (radical) cancer surgery is that cancerous tissue should be removed with a covering of non-cancerous tissue to give the best chance of cure (a so called negative or clear surgical margin). Positive surgical margins are associated with an increased chance of recurrence following surgery and require further treatment, usually with radiotherapy, which is expensive and engenders its own side effects. The investigators plan to evaluate the use of a modified version of a frozen section technique called NeuroSAFE in promoting nerve sparing without diminishing the oncological effects of surgery by generating PSMs. During this frozen section technique, once the prostate is removed, the areas of prostate adjacent to the spared nerves are sliced from the surgical specimen and rapidly frozen and stained so that they can be examined carefully by a pathologist. If the pathologist identifies a significant positive surgical margin, the spared nervous tissue on that side will be surgically resected before the patient is woken up at the end of the operation. When this is done the cancer behaves as if it had been resected with a negative surgical margin at the outset. Frozen section analysis does not add much time to the surgical procedure, as once the prostate is removed, the rest of the operation (joining the bladder to the urethra and removing pelvic lymph nodes) can proceed whilst the frozen section analysis is performed. Patients enrolled to the trial will be randomised between A) standard UK nerve sparing practice, wherein the degree to which the nerves can be spared is determined by the operating surgeon based on clinical examination, biopsy results and multi-parametric MRI and B) bilateral nerve sparing with frozen section analysis.

The Trial team recently surveyed UK robotic prostatectomists and confirm that currently UK surgeons predominately rely on MRI, biopsy and Digital Rectal Exam (DRE) findings to determine whether they can spare nerves, but that there is little consistency in the means by which a surgeon decides whether or not they can spare nerves in a particular case. Our survey tells us that UK surgeons do not use frozen section to direct nerve sparing with only 5% of UK prostatectomists ever having used it at all.

What are the potential outcomes of this research? This trial will provide a thorough evaluation of a new technique designed to minimise the occurrence of PSM and exposure to extra treatment or cancer recurrence. It will generate vital data regarding the cost/benefit of using this procedure. The relationship between the degree and frequency of nerve sparing on quality of life will be evaluated in terms of sexual potency and urinary continence in UK patients undergoing RALP. The assessment of these functions will include patient reported outcomes.

* At 2 years following surgery using Viagra or an equivalent PDE5i.

Enrollment

404 estimated patients

Sex

Male

Ages

18 to 75 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Men opting to undergo RARP for organ confined prostate cancer.
  2. Potent men (IIEF 22-25 not using PDE5i or other medications or vacuum pump)
  3. Men who are continent of urine (no self-reported urinary incontinence)
  4. Has given written informed consent
  5. Ability to read English sufficiently to answer questionnaires and understand PIS

Exclusion criteria

  1. Unable to undergo robotic prostatectomy
  2. Known urinary incontinence
  3. Previous treatment for prostate cancer
  4. Previous/current hormone treatment for prostate cancer
  5. Nerve sparing deemed futile due to locally advanced disease by surgeon and radiologist

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

404 participants in 2 patient groups

NeuroSAFE procedure
Experimental group
Description:
These patients will undergo robotic radical prostatectomy with bilateral nerve spare.The pathologist will remove the pre-painted surface of the gland (which had been in contact with the neurovascular bundles) using a sharp blade.The tissue sample will be snap frozen and embedded in OCT.Using a cryostat, 10 micron thick slices will be placed on slides.The entire length of the area of interest will be sampled in this way generating ≈10 frozen sections per side.The slides will be stained with H\&E and will be examined by a consultant pathologist.As soon as examination is complete the pathologist will telephone the operating surgeon to give the result.Presence of cancer cells at the margin of resection constitutes a positive margin and the neurovascular bundle on that side will be resected if the PSM is present in more than one slice on the same side or for a distance of 3 or more mm.
Treatment:
Procedure: NeuroSAFE procedure
Control
Active Comparator group
Description:
These patients will undergo robotic radical prostatectomy with a nerve sparing procedure based on surgical planning performed by a consultant radiologist. The mp-MRI will be reviewed by a consultant radiologist along with the details of the prostate biopsy and DRE a decision to perform unilateral, bilateral or non-nerve sparing will be established and recorded in the clinical record form (CRF) for each patient.
Treatment:
Procedure: Standard RARP

Trial contacts and locations

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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