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Evaluation of the Interest of Hyaluronic Acid in the Preservation of Sexual Function During Prostate Curietherapies (HYALEREC)

Civil Hospices of Lyon logo

Civil Hospices of Lyon

Status

Active, not recruiting

Conditions

Prostate Cancer

Treatments

Device: Hyaluronic acid arm

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04105920
69HCL19_0298

Details and patient eligibility

About

Prostate cancer is the most common cancer in humans, but low mortality, around 10 / 100,000 patients / year. It differs from other cancers by its high rate of cure, as well as a long term survival. Numerous treatment techniques are available and of comparable effectiveness: as a result it must be given importance to the short and long term side effects of these different treatments.

Prostate brachytherapy with permanent implants is thus one of the standard techniques for the treatment of localized prostate cancers of favorable grades (WHO grade 1-2).

In comparison with prostatectomy and RTE, brachytherapy allows low rates of long-term urinary toxicities, and comparable rates of erectile function preservation.

With regard to erectile dysfunction, their pathophysiology after irradiation is complex and poorly understood, including damage to the erector apparatus, innervation, vascularization, and of course the level of libido.

As an example, the radiotherapy team of the Lyon Sud hospital showed that the delivering a the lowest dose of radiation to the pudendal arteries and to the penile bulb during RTE, leads to erectile preservation rates comparable with those from the literature with nearly 85% of patients with erectile function retained at 2 years . They were also able to retrospectively show that a lower dose to the pudendal arteries correlated with better erectile function during brachytherapy.

The brachytherapy procedure requires general anesthesia and endorectal ultrasound, which are optimal conditions for injecting hyaluronic acid between the prostate, rectum, and pudendal arteries. This gesture has shown to induce very few morbidity. They want to demonstrate that the injection of hyaluronic acid during prostate brachytherapy will reduce the radiation dose to the pudendal arteries and penile bulb, and thus improve the rate of preservation of erectile function in selected patients.

This randomized phase III study comparing dyserection rates after CT performed with (Arm A) and without (Arm B) injection of HA, in a patient population without erectile dysfunction before treatment.

Full description

Prostate cancer is the most common cancer in humans with an incidence of about 100 / 100,000 cases / year in Europe, but low mortality, around 10 / 100,000 patients / year. It differs from other cancers by its high rate of cure, as well as a long term survival. Numerous treatment techniques are available and of comparable effectiveness: as a result it must be given importance to the short and long term side effects of these different treatments.

Prostate brachytherapy with permanent implants is thus one of the standard techniques for the treatment of localized prostate cancers of favorable grades (WHO grade 1-2). The overall survival and survival rates without biochemical recurrence at 5 and 10 years are comparable to those of other techniques such as prostatectomy or external radiotherapy (RTE), exceeding 95%.

In comparison with prostatectomy and RTE, brachytherapy allows low rates of long-term urinary toxicities, and comparable rates of erectile function preservation.

With regard to erectile dysfunction, their pathophysiology after irradiation is complex and poorly understood, including damage to the erector apparatus, innervation, vascularization, and of course the level of libido.

As an example, the radiotherapy team of the Lyon Sud hospital showed that the delivering a the lowest dose of radiation to the pudendal arteries and to the penile bulb during RTE, leads to erectile preservation rates comparable with those from the literature with nearly 85% of patients with erectile function retained at 2 years (18.5% moderate erectile dysfunction at 2 years, for moderate to severe degradation rates usually seen between 30 and 70% after external beam radiotherapy. They were also able to retrospectively show that a lower dose to the pudendal arteries correlated with better erectile function during brachytherapy.

The brachytherapy procedure requires general anesthesia and endorectal ultrasound, which are optimal conditions for injecting hyaluronic acid between the prostate, rectum, and pudendal arteries. This gesture has shown to induce very few morbidity. They want to demonstrate that the injection of hyaluronic acid during prostate brachytherapy will reduce the radiation dose to the pudendal arteries and penile bulb, and thus improve the rate of preservation of erectile function in selected patients.

This randomized phase III study comparing dyserection rates after CT performed with (Arm A) and without (Arm B) injection of HA, in a patient population without erectile dysfunction before treatment.

Enrollment

162 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 80 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patients aged 18 to 80 years old.

  • Patients over 75 years old must have a G8 score ≥ 14 or oncogeriatric assessment.The geriatrician's expertise will validate the brachytherapy treatment.

  • Karnofsky performance status ≥ 60% (ECOG performance status 0-2)

  • Patients diagnosed with histologically proven localized prostate adenocarcinoma

  • Prostate cancer eligible for brachytherapy according to the following criteria:

    • at. Low risk prostate cancer: Gleason score <7 and PSA <10 ng / ml AND cT1-cT2a
    • Intermediate risk prostate cancers with on or two adverse factor: Gleason score = 7 (3 + 4) OR PSA 10-15ng / ml OR cT2b-cT2c / ml
    • less than 50% positive biopsies
  • Volume of the prostate <60 cc

  • No middle lobe

  • IPSS <15/35

  • Initial IIEF5 score, no treatment, greater than or equal to 20/25

  • Patient able to sign an informed consent form

  • Patient benefiting from a social insurance system or similar system

Exclusion criteria

  • Nodal or distant metastatic evolution
  • History of abdominal or pelvic irradiation
  • Anterior treatment for prostate cancer, including hormone therapy with LHRH analogue or GnRH antagonist.
  • History of prostate resection, not allowing brachytherapy seeds implantation.
  • Uncontrolled cancer (except basal cell skin cancer)
  • Current clinical study that may interfere with this study
  • Patient unable to complete a self-administered questionnaire and understand the ins and outs of the trial
  • Major patients protected by law
  • Allergy to hyaluronic acid

Trial design

Primary purpose

Other

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

162 participants in 2 patient groups

hyaluronic acid arm
Experimental group
Description:
Patients included in this arm, will have, before insertion of brachytherapy seeds in the prostate, an injection of hyaluronic acid between the prostate, rectum, and pudendal arteries
Treatment:
Device: Hyaluronic acid arm
Conventional brachytherapy
Active Comparator group
Description:
Patients included in this arm will have the conventional brachytherapy.
Treatment:
Device: Hyaluronic acid arm

Trial contacts and locations

3

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Central trial contact

Samy HORN, Dr; Julien BERTHILLER, Dr

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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