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Stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) is a very precise form of radiation therapy that allows the physician to deliver more radiation dose in a single session. Because of this, the number of radiation sessions can be reduced from the typical 45-48 sessions, as in conventional daily session radiation, to 5 sessions given every other day over a week and a half. Giving the radiation at a higher dose during each treatment may be more effective in killing the prostate cancer cells than the standard way of using external radiation therapy where a small amount of radiation is given over many sessions.
Androgen Deprivation Therapy (ADT) or hormonal therapy is one of the methods to treat intermediate risk prostate cancer. This therapy works by reducing the level of testosterone and stopping them from affecting your cancer. The ADT used in this study is known as Degarelix. Degarelix is an approved medication that reduces the body's production of testosterone; this medication is usually given to all men with intermediate risk prostate cancer getting external radiation.
This study is a randomized study to find out whether combining stereotactic (also known as precision) radiation to the prostate cancer combined with a short course of Degarelix will result in a greater likelihood of killing the cancer in the prostate compared to stereotactic radiation therapy given alone. It has been shown that the combination of radiation with medications that interfere with testosterone production and its effects makes prostate cancer cells more sensitive to the radiation.
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Inclusion criteria
Biopsy proven intermediate risk prostate cancer, which includes patients with any one of the following variables:
Gleason 7 disease
PSA 10-20 ng/ml
Clinical T2b-T2c disease Note: Patients who only have radiographic evidence of T3 disease (i.e. extracapsular extension, or seminal vesical invasion radiographically) will not be excluded.
Serum testosterone ≥ 240 ng/dL determined within 2 months prior to enrollment
At least 4 weeks must have elapsed from major surgery
KPS ≥ 80%
Prostate size as determined on MRI to be < 90 cc. Prostate size can be determined on CT scan if MRI is not available.
18 years of age or older
IPSS ≤ 20
Patient must be available for follow-up. After 2 years of follow-up following post-treatment biopsy, telephone-based follow-up will be acceptable
Laboratory test findings within 8 weeks of randomization:
Exclusion criteria
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56 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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