Status
Conditions
About
Background:
- Radiation is a common treatment for prostate cancer. It helps damage tumor cells and causes them to die. Radiation can be effective, but some tumors may be harder to treat with radiation or even with surgery. This happens to a small number of men who have either radiation or surgery for prostate cancer. Most men who have these hard-to-treat tumors do not know if the tumor has recurred only in the prostate or has spread to another area. Also, men whose prostate cancer has recurred only after radiation may have different treatment options. This study will use improved imaging studies to better understand why some men do not respond as well to initial radiation treatments.
Objectives:
- To use detailed imaging studies to look at the results of local radiation therapy for prostate cancer.
Eligibility:
Design:
Full description
Background:
Radiation therapy is a commonly used therapy for prostate cancers. The majority of men with prostate cancer will be cured by therapy; however, a subset, typically men with bulky or higher risk disease will develop PSA failure after definitive radiotherapy.
Currently, men with a rising PSA after radiotherapy may receive hormonal therapy or may undergo further evaluation for local failure.
It is not known how many men with rising PSA after radiotherapy may have a local failure and would benefit from a salvage local therapy. With the availability of a growing number of local salvage options, accurately defining the presence and characteristics of local failure is critical.
Objective:
To determine the rate of local recurrence in patients with prostate cancer treated with radiotherapy using multiparametric prostate MR guided and standard biopsies.
Eligibility:
Patients with no local therapy for prostate cancer:
Age >= 18 years.
Histologically confirmed adenocarcinoma of the prostate.
Intermediate or high risk prostate cancer (clinical stage >=T2b, Gleason score 7 or higher, or PSA >10, extracapsular extension or seminal vesicle invasion on MRI).
Patient will be treated with radiotherapy for prostate cancer.
ECOG performance status <=2.
Patients with biochemical relapse after radiotherapy for prostate cancer:
Evidence of prostate cancer recurrence (palpable abnormality after radiotherapy, radiographic evidence of local failure, biochemical relapse).
ECOG performance status <=2.
Age >= 18 years.
Histologically confirmed adenocarcinoma of the prostate.
Design:
Patients with untreated prostate cancer:
Participants will be screened with a physical examination, medical history, laboratory tests (CBC, chemistries, liver transaminases, PSA, PT/PTT), and imaging studies (as appropriate to staging).
Patients will undergo multiparametric MR imaging and MR guided prostate biopsy of all suspicious lesions (diagnostic and research).
Patients will receive radiotherapy at NIH or at an outside facility.
Patients will return for follow up at 3 month intervals for the first 2 years and then every six months for 5 years for PSA measurement.
Patients will undergo a multiparametric MR at 6 months after therapy. No biopsy is obtained unless patients meet the definition of treatment failure. This study would allow future correlation with early changes that may predict for eventual outcome.
Patients with a rising PSA that meet the criteria for biochemical failure by the Phoenix definition will undergo repeat multiparametric prostate MRI with biopsy of suspicious lesions (diagnostic and research).
Patients with recurrent prostate cancer:
Participants will be screened with a physical examination, medical history, laboratory tests (CBC, chemistries, Liver transaminases, PSA, PT/PTT), and imaging studies.
Patients will undergo multiparametric MR imaging and MR guided prostate biopsy of all suspicious lesions (diagnostic and research).
120 patients with untreated prostate cancer and 100 patients with biochemical recurrence after radiotherapy will be accrued to this study.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
INCLUSION CRITERIA: men with untreated prostate cancer.
INCLUSION CRITERIA: for men with presumed prostate cancer relapse
EXCLUSION CRITERIA:
300 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Central trial contact
Deborah E Citrin, M.D.; Theresa C Cooley Zgela, R.N.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal