Phase III study of local or systemic therapy INtensification DIrected by PET in prostate CAncer patients with post-prostaTEctomy biochemical recurrence (INDICATE): ECOG-ACRIN EA8191.

Authors

Neha Vapiwala

Neha Vapiwala

University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA

Neha Vapiwala , Yu-Hui Chen , Steve Y. Cho , Fenghai Duan , Christos Kyriakopoulos , Daniel H. Shevrin , Rana R. McKay , Bridget F. Koontz , Evan Y. Yu , Volkan Beylergil , David A. Mankoff , Jonathan McConathy , Glenn Liu , Terence Z. Wong , Michael Anthony Carducci

Organizations

University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, MA, University of Wisconsin SMPH, Department of Radiology, University of Wisconsin Carbone Cancer Center, Madison, WI, Brown University, Providence, RI, University of Wisconsin Carbone Cancer Center, Madison, WI, NorthShore University Health System, Evanston, IL, University of California San Diego, Moores Cancer Center, La Jolla, CA, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC, Division of Oncology, Department of Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, Columbia, New York, NY, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL, Chief, Division of Nuclear Medicine and Radiotheranostics Professor of Radiology Professor in Medicine, Division of Medical Oncology Duke Cancer Institute Medical Physics Graduate Program Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC, Sidney Kimmel Cancer Center, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD

Research Funding

U.S. National Institutes of Health
U.S. National Institutes of Health

Background: Radiation therapy (RT) to the prostate bed and pelvic nodes with short-term androgen deprivation therapy (STAD) is considered a standard of care (SOC) salvage therapy (ST) paradigm for prostate cancer (PC) patients (pts) with post-prostatectomy (RP) biochemical recurrence (BCR). Fluciclovine-PET/CT imaging is FDA-approved in this setting, with improved accuracy for detection of metastases not identified with conventional imaging (CIM). Given PET's greater sensitivity and specificity, its findings are increasingly but variably applied to justify modification or omission of SOC therapies without high-level evidence of clinical benefit. PET may help identify candidates for local or systemic treatment intensification of the otherwise non-tailored SOC approach. Improved systemic control and disease detection with molecular imaging have led to increasing use of focally ablative metastasis-directed RT, to delay or enhance systemic therapy through increased local control. There is also interest in earlier use of systemic therapy; apalutamide (Apa) is a nonsteroidal antiandrogen with established efficacy in improving overall and radiographic progression-free survival (PFS) for non-metastatic castration-resistant and metastatic castration-sensitive PC. This study will evaluate whether pts with PET-detected lesions benefit from such local or systemic treatment intensification approaches. Methods: PC pts with post-RP BCR (PSA>0.5ng/mL; >0.2ng/mL if within 12 mos of RP) and no metastases on CIM who are candidates for SOC ST (RT to prostate bed and pelvic nodes with STAD) are eligible. Prior to study registration, pts undergo SOC baseline PET (18F-fluciclovine but PSMA radiotracers permitted pending commercial availability). Based on institutional clinical interpretation of the SOC PET, pts will be placed in Cohort 1 (PET-negative) or 2 (PET-positive for extra-pelvic metastases). Cohort 1 will be randomized to SOC ST +/- Apa for 6 months and Cohort 2 will be randomized to SOC ST and Apa +/- metastasis-directed RT to PET-positive lesions. The primary endpoint is PFS, defined as time from randomization to radiographic progression on CIM, symptomatic disease or death. Primary objectives are to evaluate whether addition of Apa to SOC ST and addition of metastasis-directed RT to SOC ST and Apa could prolong PFS in Cohorts 1 and 2, respectively. For Cohort 1, 480 pts will be randomized with 85% power to distinguish 5-year PFS rate of 90% (Apa arm) vs. 80% (SOC arm) using one-sided stratified log-rank test with type I error of 0.025. For Cohort 2, 324 pts will be randomized with 85% power to distinguish 5-year PFS rate of 76.5% in the experimental arm from 61.5% in the control arm. Secondary endpoints include overall and event-free survival, toxicity, and PET progression. Clinical trial information: NCT04423211

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Abstract Details

Meeting

2021 ASCO Annual Meeting

Session Type

Poster Session

Session Title

Genitourinary Cancer—Prostate, Testicular, and Penile

Track

Genitourinary Cancer—Prostate, Testicular, and Penile

Sub Track

Prostate Cancer–Local-Regional Disease

Clinical Trial Registration Number

NCT04423211

Citation

J Clin Oncol 39, 2021 (suppl 15; abstr TPS5098)

DOI

10.1200/JCO.2021.39.15_suppl.TPS5098

Abstract #

TPS5098

Poster Bd #

Online Only

Abstract Disclosures