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A Phase III Trial of Short Term Androgen Deprivation With Pelvic Lymph Node or Prostate Bed Only Radiotherapy (SPPORT) in Prostate Cancer Patients With a Rising PSA After Radical Prostatectomy
Primary
To determine whether the addition of NC-STAD to PBRT improves freedom from progression
(FFP) [maintenance of a PSA less than the nadir+2 ng/mL, absence of clinical failure and
absence of death from any cause] for 5 years, over that of PBRT alone in men treated with
salvage RT after radical prostatectomy;
To determine whether NC-STAD+PLNRT+PBRT improves FFP over that of NC-STAD+PBRT
and PBRT alone in men treated with salvage RT after radical prostatectomy.
Secondary
To compare the rates of a PSA greater than or equal to 0.4 ng/mL and rising at 5 years after randomization (secondary biochemical failure endpoint), the development of hormone refractory disease (3 rises in PSA
during treatment with salvage androgen deprivation therapy), distant metastasis, cause-specific
mortality and overall mortality;
To compare acute and late morbidity based on CTCAE, v. 3.0;
To measure the expression of cell kinetic, apoptotic pathway, and angiogenesis-related genes in
archival diagnostic tissue to better define the risk of FFP, distant failure, cause-specific mortality,
and overall mortality after salvage radiotherapy for prostate cancer, independently of
conventional clinical parameters now used;
To quantify blood product based proteomic and genomic (single nucleotide polymorphisms)
patterns, and urine-based genomic patterns before and at different times after treatment to better define the risk of FFP, distant failure, cause-specific mortality, and overall mortality after salvage
radiotherapy for prostate cancer, independently of conventional clinical parameters now used;
To assess the degree, duration, and significant differences of disease-specific health related
quality of life (HRQOL) decrements among treatment arms; it is hypothesized that QOL as
measured by the EPIC will significantly worsen by the increasing aggressiveness of treatment
and that cognition as measured by the neurocognitive test battery (the HVLT-R, Trail Making
Test, parts A & B, and the COWAT) will be significantly worse in the arms with NC-STAD.
To assess whether mood is improved and depression is decreased with the more aggressive
therapy if it improves FFP; it is hypothesized that QOL as measured by the HSCL-25 will
significantly improve with the increasing aggressiveness of treatment due to improved FFP.
An exploratory aim is to assess whether an incremental gain in FFP and survival with more
aggressive therapy outweighs decrements in the primary generic domains of health related
quality of life (i.e., mobility, self care, usual activities, pain/discomfort, and anxiety/depression).
This aim is reported as the Quality Adjusted FFP Year (QAFFPY) and as the Quality Adjusted
Life Year (QALY). The QAFFPY and QALY will be compared among treatment arms and to the
literature as described in Section 1.6.
An exploratory aim is to evaluate the cost-utility of the treatment arm demonstrating the most
significant benefit (in terms of the primary outcome) in comparison with other widely accepted
cancer and non-cancer therapies. Cost-utility will be assessed by the EQ-5D among treatment
arms to determine which therapy dominates.
An exploratory aim is to assess associations between serum levels of beta-amyloid (Abeta) and
measures of cognition (as measured by the HVLT-R, Trail Making Tests, parts A & B, or the
COWAT) and mood and depression (as measured by the HSCL-25).
To collect paraffin-embedded tissue blocks, serum, plasma, urine, and whole blood for future
translational research analyses
An exploratory aim is to assess the relationship(s) between the American Urological Association
Symptom Index (AUA SI) and urinary morbidity using the CTCAE v. 3.0 grading system.
Primary
To determine whether the addition of NC-STAD to PBRT improves freedom from progression
(FFP) [maintenance of a PSA less than the nadir+2 ng/mL, absence of clinical failure and
absence of death from any cause] for 5 years, over that of PBRT alone in men treated with
salvage RT after radical prostatectomy;
To determine whether NC-STAD+PLNRT+PBRT improves FFP over that of NC-STAD+PBRT
and PBRT alone in men treated with salvage RT after radical prostatectomy.
Secondary
To compare the rates of a PSA greater than or equal to 0.4 ng/mL and rising at 5 years after randomization (secondary biochemical failure endpoint), the development of hormone refractory disease (3 rises in PSA
during treatment with salvage androgen deprivation therapy), distant metastasis, cause-specific
mortality and overall mortality;
To compare acute and late morbidity based on CTCAE, v. 3.0;
To measure the expression of cell kinetic, apoptotic pathway, and angiogenesis-related genes in
archival diagnostic tissue to better define the risk of FFP, distant failure, cause-specific mortality,
and overall mortality after salvage radiotherapy for prostate cancer, independently of
conventional clinical parameters now used;
To quantify blood product based proteomic and genomic (single nucleotide polymorphisms)
patterns, and urine-based genomic patterns before and at different times after treatment to better define the risk of FFP, distant failure, cause-specific mortality, and overall mortality after salvage
radiotherapy for prostate cancer, independently of conventional clinical parameters now used;
To assess the degree, duration, and significant differences of disease-specific health related
quality of life (HRQOL) decrements among treatment arms; it is hypothesized that QOL as
measured by the EPIC will significantly worsen by the increasing aggressiveness of treatment
and that cognition as measured by the neurocognitive test battery (the HVLT-R, Trail Making
Test, parts A & B, and the COWAT) will be significantly worse in the arms with NC-STAD.
To assess whether mood is improved and depression is decreased with the more aggressive
therapy if it improves FFP; it is hypothesized that QOL as measured by the HSCL-25 will
significantly improve with the increasing aggressiveness of treatment due to improved FFP.
An exploratory aim is to assess whether an incremental gain in FFP and survival with more
aggressive therapy outweighs decrements in the primary generic domains of health related
quality of life (i.e., mobility, self care, usual activities, pain/discomfort, and anxiety/depression).
This aim is reported as the Quality Adjusted FFP Year (QAFFPY) and as the Quality Adjusted
Life Year (QALY). The QAFFPY and QALY will be compared among treatment arms and to the
literature as described in Section 1.6.
An exploratory aim is to evaluate the cost-utility of the treatment arm demonstrating the most
significant benefit (in terms of the primary outcome) in comparison with other widely accepted
cancer and non-cancer therapies. Cost-utility will be assessed by the EQ-5D among treatment
arms to determine which therapy dominates.
An exploratory aim is to assess associations between serum levels of beta-amyloid (Abeta) and
measures of cognition (as measured by the HVLT-R, Trail Making Tests, parts A & B, or the
COWAT) and mood and depression (as measured by the HSCL-25).
To collect paraffin-embedded tissue blocks, serum, plasma, urine, and whole blood for future
translational research analyses
An exploratory aim is to assess the relationship(s) between the American Urological Association
Symptom Index (AUA SI) and urinary morbidity using the CTCAE v. 3.0 grading system.
Recruitment Status
Past Studies