URONCOR 06-24


URONCOR 06-24

Short Versus Long-term Androgen Deprivation Therapy With Salvage Radiotherapy in Prostate Cancer

Short Versus Long-term Androgen Deprivation Therapy Combined With Salvage Radiotherapy in Prostate Cancer Patients With Biochemical Recurrence After Prostatectomy: a Multicentre Phase III Randomised Controlled Trial.

NCT Number
NCT05781217

Status
Recruiting

Study type
Interventional

Fase
Phase 3

Participants
534

Study record

Short titleShort Versus Long-term Androgen Deprivation Therapy With Salvage Radiotherapy in Prostate Cancer. URONCOR 0624
Official titleShort Versus Long-term Androgen Deprivation Therapy Combined With Salvage Radiotherapy in Prostate Cancer Patients With Biochemical Recurrence After Prostatectomy: a Multicentre Phase III Randomised Controlled Trial
AcronymURONCOR 06-24
ClinicalTrials.gov IDNCT05781217
StatusRecruiting
FasePhase 3
Study typeInterventional
Estimated participants534

Promotor

SponsorResearch Institute in Radiation Oncology – Spanish Foundation of Radiation Oncology
Last registry updateNovember 17, 2023

Study contact

NombreTelephoneEmail
Pablo Raña, PhD0034696633409investigacion@seor.es

Equipo investigador

RolNombre
Investigador principalFelipe Couñago
Co-investigadora principalCarmen González San Segundo
Co-investigador principalAlfonso Gómez Iturriaga
Co-investigador principalFernando López Campos

Condiciones

  • Prostate Cancer
  • Biochemical Recurrence
  • Androgen Deprivation Therapy
  • Salvage Radiotherapy
  • Metastases-free Survival

Intervention / treatment

TipoIntervention / treatmentDescription
DrugTriptorelin, goserelin, leuprorelinADT with LHRH analogues, with bicalutamide 50 mg/day started 10 days before the first ADT injection and discontinued after 30 days.

Study design

Primary PurposeTreatment
AllocationRandomized
Interventional ModelParallel Assignment
MaskingNone (Open Label)
Number of arms2

Study arms

BrazoTipoTreatment
Short-term ADT (6 months)Active ComparatorLHRH analogues for 6 months + bicalutamide 50 for 30 days.
Long-term ADT (24 months)Active ComparatorLHRH analogues for 24 months + bicalutamide 50 for 30 days.

Treatment description

ADT will consist of LHRH analogues (triptorelin, goserelin, leuprorelin) with bicalutamide 50 mg/day started 10 days before the first ADT injection to avoid LHRH-related flare-ups. Bicalutamide will be discontinued after 30 days. The LHRH analogue will be initiated prior to the start of radiotherapy and administered for 6 or 24 months depending on treatment allocation. The maximum time permitted between randomisation and administration of the first LHRH dose is 30 days. The maximum time from the first LHRH dose to the start of SRT is 60 days.

Study summary

SRT and ADT are widely used in routine clinical practice to treat patients who develop BCR after prostatectomy. In this context, the study intends to perform a multicentre, phase III trial to define the optimal duration of ADT: 6 vs. 24 months.

Primary outcome measure

Outcome MeasureMeasure DescriptionTime Frame
To compare 5-year MFS rates in prostate cancer patients treated with long- versus short-term ADT in combination with salvage radiotherapyDistant metastasis-free survival: time from administration of the first LHRH analogue until the patient develops M1a disease or M1b-c disease according to RECIST 1.1 criteria based on conventional CT imaging and bone scans.5 years

Secondary outcome measures

Outcome MeasureMeasure DescriptionTime Frame
Biochemical-relapse free intervalBRFS: time to biochemical progression defined as an increase in PSA confirmed by a second PSA determination.5 years
Pelvic progression-free survivalPelvic PFS: time to local recurrence and/or N1 disease according to RECIST 1.1 criteria by conventional CT imaging and bone scan.5 years
Time to start of cytotoxic treatmentCytotoxic treatment-free interval: time to the start of the first cytotoxic treatment or local treatment for oligorecurrence.5 years
Time to castration resistanceTime to biochemical and/or clinical progression with castration levels.5 years
Cancer-specific survivalTime to death due to prostate cancer or treatment-related complications.5 years
Overall survivalTime to death from any cause.5 years
Acute and late toxicityAcute toxicity according to CTCAE criteria v. 4.0.5 years
Late toxicityLate toxicity from 3 months to 5 years after completing RT according to CTCAE v. 4.0.5 years
Quality of life (QoL)Assessed with the EORTC QLQ-C30 and QLQ-PR25 questionnaires.5 years

Participation criteria

Edad18 years and older
Voluntarios sanosNo

Inclusion criteria

  1. Patients with histologically-confirmed prostate cancer treated with radical prostatectomy. Patients who have not undergone lymph node dissection are eligible for inclusion.
  2. Biochemical recurrence after prostatectomy: BCR is defined as a PSA value ≥ 0.2 ng/mL, with at least one confirmatory PSA determination ≥ two weeks after the first test.
  3. Patients with Gleason 8-10, pT3b or R1 are eligible for inclusion in the trial with PSA ≥ 0.15 ng/mL.
  4. Intermediate and high-risk patients according to the classification criteria proposed by González San Segundo et al.
  5. Testosterone level > 150 ng/dL at inclusion.
  6. ECOG 0-1.
  7. Life expectancy > 5 years.
  8. Signed informed consent.

Exclusion criteria

  1. Presence of pN1 disease in the original surgical specimen.
  2. Presence of macroscopic disease on imaging tests.
  3. PSA < 0.2 or < 0.15 ng/mL if Gleason score = 10, pT3b, or R1 in the radical prostatectomy specimen.
  4. Previous pelvic radiotherapy.
  5. Radiotherapy contraindicated.
  6. Ongoing treatment with ADT or PSA-modulating drugs.
  7. Inability to understand the treatment protocol or sign informed consent.

Study sites

CiudadStatusCentreContacto
Barcelona, Spain, 08036Not yet recruitingHospital Clinic De BarcelonaJoel Mases, MD
Barcelona, Spain, 08035Not yet recruitingHospital Universitario Vall d’HebronXavier Maldonado, MD
Barcelona, Spain, 08041Not yet recruitingHospital De La Santa Creu I Sant PauGemma Sancho, MD
Madrid, Spain, 28034RecruitingHospital Ramon y CajalFernando López, MD
Madrid, Spain, 28040RecruitingHospital Universitario Fundacion Jimenez DiazJesús Oliveira, MD
Madrid, Spain, 28040Not yet recruitingHospital Clinico San CarlosNoelia Sanmamed, MD
Madrid, Spain, 28034RecruitingHospital Ruber InternacionalAurora Rodríguez, MD
Madrid, Spain, 28007RecruitingHospital Gregorio MarañónCarmen González, MD
Madrid, Spain, 28050Active, not recruitingHospital Universitario HM Sanchinarro
Madrid, Spain, 28002RecruitingHospital San Francisco de AsísFelipe Couñago, MD
Madrid, Spain, 28046Not yet recruitingHospital Universitario de la PazLuis Alberto Glaria, MD
Tarragona, Spain, 43204Active, not recruitingHospital Universitario Sant Joan de Reus
Valencia, Spain, 46026Not yet recruitingHospital Universitario y Politecnico de La FeAntonio José Conde, MD
L’Hospitalet de Llobregat, Barcelona, Spain, 08908Not yet recruitingInstituto Catalán de Oncología HospitaletAnna Maria Boladeras, MD
Fuenlabrada, Madrid, Spain, 28942Active, not recruitingHospital Universitario de Fuenlabrada
Pozuelo De Alarcón, Madrid, Spain, 28223RecruitingHospital Universitario Quiron MadridVictor Duque, MD
Baracaldo, Vizcaya, Spain, 48903Not yet recruitingHospital de CrucesAlfonso Gómez, MD

More information

View official record on ClinicalTrials.gov