Investigative Study of the Role of Focal Therapy for Prostate Cancer Treatment

NCT ID: NCT00928603

Last Updated: 2009-09-15

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

UNKNOWN

Clinical Phase

PHASE1

Total Enrollment

100 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2009-09-30

Study Completion Date

2014-09-30

Brief Summary

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Surgery and irradiation for organ confined prostate cancer provide excellent long-term cancer control but they may be accompanied by a risk of side effects that decrease quality of life. Due to the stage migration of prostate cancer, the potential for patients to undergo unnecessary treatment and the risk of treatment related morbidity, has been increased.Alternative strategies that offer the possibility of delaying, obviating or minimizing the impact of treatment maintaining the same oncological long term results have been investigated. Despite pros and cons active surveillance has not gained popularity in men with low risk prostate cancer as only 7% of men with localized prostate cancer remain in active surveillance.

Traditionally solid tumors have been treated with radical surgery but selective, organ sparing therapies are now common for tumors of the breast, skin and kidney, resulting in equivalent rates of cancer control, lower morbidity rates and less disfigurement. With this in mind the potential role of focal ablative therapy for localized prostate cancer might be considered.

The researchers will investigate the feasibility and the efficacy in term of quality of life and oncologic results of focal therapy by a pilot not randomized prospective study in a patients with localized prostate cancer who meet low risk criteria based on clinical, biopsy and imaging data.

Detailed Description

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Prostate cancer is a considerable health risk for men throughout the world. In the United States, prostate cancer has been the second or third leading cause of cancer death in men in each of the last 75 years. In the European Union, an estimated 68,000 men died of prostate cancer in 2004, making it the third most common cause of cancer related death While prostate cancer mortality in East Asian countries remains lower than that in Europe and the United States, it has been continuously and dramatically increasing in the last 40 years. With the introduction of PSA screening test and transrectal ultrasound guided prostate biopsy, the detection rate of prostate carcinoma has markedly improved. Surgery and irradiation each provide excellent long-term cancer control but they may be accompanied by a risk of side effects that decrease quality of life. Since some of prostate cancers grow slowly and, even if untreated, might never progress to symptomatic disease, patients and clinicians face the dilemma of if, when and how to treat localized prostate cancer. Due to the stage migration of prostate cancer, the potential for patients to undergo unnecessary treatment and the risk of treatment related morbidity, there has been, in the last years, an increased interest in alternative strategies that offer the possibility of delaying, obviating or minimizing the impact of treatment maintaining the same oncological long term results. One such strategy is active surveillance with selective delayed intervention. Active surveillance consists of appropriate selection of patients to safely avoid radical treatment and its attendant potential for morbidity, regular and rigorous monitoring of the cancer via physical examination, PSA, biopsies and imaging and initiation of treatment with curative intent at any clinical, pathological or radiographic evidence of disease progression. Despite pros and cons have recently addressed, active surveillance has not gained popularity in men with low risk prostate cancer (only around 7% of men with localized prostate cancer in the Cancer of the Prostate Strategic Urologic Research Endeavor national registry have elected to undergo active surveillance as the initial treatment options). Traditionally solid tumors have been treated with radical surgery but selective, organ sparing therapies are now common for tumors of the breast, skin and kidney, resulting in equivalent rates of cancer control, lower morbidity rates and less disfigurement. With this in mind the potential role of focal ablative therapy for localized prostate cancer might be considered. We investigate the feasibility and the efficacy in term of quality of life and oncologic results of focal therapy by a pilot not randomized prospective study in a patients with localized prostate cancer who meet low risk criteria based on clinical, biopsy and imaging data.

Conditions

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Prostate Cancer

Study Design

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Allocation Method

NA

Intervention Model

SINGLE_GROUP

Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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cryotherapy

Focal Cryotherapy of localized tumor of prostate after spatial definition by in-house extended perineal core biopsy using a template biopsy strategy under local or general anesthesia

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Focal Cryoablation

Intervention Type PROCEDURE

Cryotherapy is administered via the perineum under ultrasound guidance by third-generation 17-gauge cryoprobes using gas and thermal couples. Under transrectal ultrasound guidance cryoprobes are placed approximately 1 cm apart and within 5 mm of the capsule on the side of tumor. The extent of freezing was limited to the area or lobe of the gland with histologically proved tumor.

Interventions

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Focal Cryoablation

Cryotherapy is administered via the perineum under ultrasound guidance by third-generation 17-gauge cryoprobes using gas and thermal couples. Under transrectal ultrasound guidance cryoprobes are placed approximately 1 cm apart and within 5 mm of the capsule on the side of tumor. The extent of freezing was limited to the area or lobe of the gland with histologically proved tumor.

Intervention Type PROCEDURE

Other Intervention Names

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Thermal ablative treatment

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

1. Clinical

* Clinical stage T1c or T2a
* PSA less than 10 ng/ml
* PSA velocity less than 2 ng/ml yearly in the year prior to diagnosis
2. Biopsy

* Minimum of 12 cores
* No Gleason grade 4 or 5
* Maximum percentage of cancer in each core (20%)
* Maximum length of cancer in each core ( 5 mm)
* Maximum percentage of total cores with cancer (20%)
3. Imaging

* Single lesion with a maximum size (12 mm)
* Maximum length of capsular contact (10 mm)
* No evidence of extraprostatic extension or seminal vesicle invasion

Exclusion Criteria

1. Tumor in the transitional zone
2. Previous prostate surgery for benign pathology
3. Any rectal or perineal pathology hampering instrumentation and manipulation of the area
4. Benign or malignant rectal lesion
5. Any condition that in the judgment of the investigators would interfere with the subject's ability to provide informed consent, comply with study instructions, place the subject at increased risk, or which might confound interpretation of study results.
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Maximum Eligible Age

76 Years

Eligible Sex

MALE

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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Università Vita-Salute San Raffaele

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Department of Urology, University "Vita Salute" San Raffaele Milan

Principal Investigators

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Giorgio Guazzoni, MD

Role: STUDY_DIRECTOR

University "Vita e Salute" San Raffaele Milano

Locations

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Department of Urology University "Vita e Salute" HSR

Milan, , Italy

Site Status

Countries

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Italy

References

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Losa A, Gadda GM, Lazzeri M, Lughezzani G, Cardone G, Freschi M, Lista G, Larcher A, Nava LD, Guazzoni G. Complications and quality of life after template-assisted transperineal prostate biopsy in patients eligible for focal therapy. Urology. 2013 Jun;81(6):1291-6. doi: 10.1016/j.urology.2012.11.078. Epub 2013 Mar 19.

Reference Type DERIVED
PMID: 23522299 (View on PubMed)

Other Identifiers

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U-HSR-VT-001

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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