Focal Therapy for Prostate Cancer - A Pilot Study of Focal Low Dose Rate Brachytherapy

NCT ID: NCT01830166

Last Updated: 2017-07-13

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

NA

Total Enrollment

10 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2013-05-31

Study Completion Date

2019-01-31

Brief Summary

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This project will develop and evaluate a treatment plan for prostate focal therapy based on low dose rate brachytherapy. The participants entering this study are those suitable for active surveillance. These participants will be monitored with various imaging methods and interventions such as MR elastography, Transrectal ultrasound elastography, PET/CT and transperineal mapping biopsy to determine the extent of cancer and suitable treatments. Those suitable for focal therapy will be offered the option of low dose rate brachytherapy (LDRB) focal therapy in addition to active surveillance or radical therapy.

This study will be used to evaluate the long term use of multi-modal, multi-parametric prostate cancer imaging, combining data from MRI, ultrasound and 11C-choline PET/CT. Such methods can be used to eliminate the need for invasive methods such as mapping biopsies.

Detailed Description

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1. Purpose

To test the efficacy, acute side effects and long term safety of Focal Therapy in Prostate Cancer, as compared to conventional radical lose dose radiation prostate brachytherapy (LDR-PB).
2. Hypothesis

We hypothesize that, in an appropriately selected group of early-stage, favourable risk prostate cancer patients, focal LDR-PB will lead to fewer acute side effects, long term complications resulting is a better quality of life than radical LDR-PB.

We also hypothesize that multi-modal, multi-parametric imaging will enable monitoring of the results of focal therapy with an accuracy that is high enough to eventually replace repeated (and invasive) mapping biopsies.
3. Justification

The imaging study we propose is unique in terms of its multi-modality, multi-parametric approach. Local disease will be monitored by a very complete set of multi-parametric MR, ultrasound and PET-CT imaging. Potential spread of the disease may be captured by abdominal and whole-body PET-CT. Comparison with biopsies will be more accurate than in other studies because biopsy location will be accurately provided by the trans-perineal three-dimensional template-guided pathological mapping biopsy (TTMB), in contrast to Post-radical prostatectomy (RP) studies that use axial whole mount slices which suffer from a significant change in prostate physical shape and unpredictable deformation due to fixation, making an accurate registration of pathology and imaging difficult.

The impact of our study on the field of medical imaging will also be significant. Advances in the topics of deformable multi-modal registration, dosimetry, and the characterization of cancer as image features in MR, ultrasound and PET-CT are expected. These findings will be widely disseminated in papers addressing both clinical and technical publications.

We are not aware of any study in which TTMB-guided focal brachytherapy has been implemented and tested. A center of our size, with our record in outcomes, and with a complete set of imaging expertise and tools to help with patient selection and monitoring, may make a very significant impact in how focal therapy can be implemented and evaluated. Therefore, we have the potential to provide valuable input on how to translate focal therapy into standard care for appropriately selected patients.
4. Objectives

The specific objectives of this study are:
1. To develop provisional criteria for what constitutes focal disease and treatment plans appropriate for focal LDR-PB.
2. To show that patients undergoing focal therapy have a better quality of life than those undergoing radical therapy.
3. To correlate multi-modal, multi-parametric imaging results with the results of mapping biopsies with the goal of developing image-based techniques for patient selection and monitoring.
5. Research Method

Participants in the study will undergo multi-modal, multi-parametric imaging as outlined in the study protocol (MRI, Ultrasound imaging, and PET/CT). Participants that are eligible to continue in the study and receive focal therapy will undergo 3D- Template-Guided Trans-Perineal Pathological Mapping Biopsy (TTMB). Participants will also be asked to complete study surveys and have repeat pathological mapping done at 2 year post treatment..
6. Statistical Analysis

In our recruiting plan, we have assumed that approximately 50% of the participants who are initially eligible will continue to focal therapy. The planned sample size for this pilot study is 10.

Imaging hypotheses: The hypothesis that focal treatment will change the imaged treated area tissue properties but will leave unchanged properties of tissue in the untreated area will be tested using paired data on each participant.

Conditions

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Prostate Cancer

Study Design

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Allocation Method

NA

Intervention Model

SINGLE_GROUP

Primary Study Purpose

HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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Low Dose Radiation Focal Brachytherapy

Low Dose Radiation Focal Brachytherapy

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Low Dose Radiation Focal Brachytherapy

Intervention Type RADIATION

Low Dose Radiation Focal Brachytherapy

Interventions

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Low Dose Radiation Focal Brachytherapy

Low Dose Radiation Focal Brachytherapy

Intervention Type RADIATION

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Must be 18 years of age or older
* Must be able to give informed consent
* Histologic diagnosis of prostate adenocarcinoma made on transrectal guided prostate biopsy with no fewer than 6 cores taken
* The prostate cancer is considered suitable for a strategy of active surveillance as well as conventional radical treatment.
* No more than 2 cores from one lobe containing cancer
* Gleason sum no greater than 3+4 =7 in any one core
* Clinical T stage no higher than T2a
* Serum prostate-specific antigen (PSA) no higher than 10 ng/mL
* No previous radiation therapy to the pelvis
* No prior history of malignancy except non-melanoma skin cancer
* Must be suitable for general or spinal anesthesia
* Must not be on coumadin or other anticoagulants
* Must be suitable for multi-parametric MRI scan (excluded are those with significant renal impairment that would preclude the use of contrast agents and may exclude some patients with cardiac pacemaker, wires, or defibrillator; artificial heart valve; brain aneurysm clip; electrical stimulator for nerves or bones; ear or eye implant; implanted drug infusion pump; coil, catheter, or filter in any blood vessel. Some men with metallic prostheses; shrapnel, bullets, or other metal fragments retained in the body may be excluded as well.

Exclusion Criteria

* They are unable to participate in an MRI scan.
* They are unable to undergo general or spinal anesthesia.
* They are on anticoagulation therapy (blood thinners).
* They have had previous radiotherapy to the pelvis.
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Eligible Sex

MALE

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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British Columbia Cancer Agency

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Responsibility Role SPONSOR

Principal Investigators

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William J Morris, MD

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

British Columbia Cancer Agency

Locations

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British Columbia Cancer Agency

Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada

Site Status

Countries

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Canada

Other Identifiers

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H12-03268

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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