Catalogue Search | MBRL
Search Results Heading
Explore the vast range of titles available.
MBRLSearchResults
-
DisciplineDiscipline
-
Is Peer ReviewedIs Peer Reviewed
-
Item TypeItem Type
-
SubjectSubject
-
YearFrom:-To:
-
More FiltersMore FiltersSourceLanguage
Done
Filters
Reset
45,592
result(s) for
"Prostate neoplasm"
Sort by:
Androgen receptor pathway inhibitors and taxanes in metastatic prostate cancer: an outcome-adaptive randomized platform trial
by
Hjälm-Eriksson, Marie
,
De Maeseneer, Daan
,
Verbiene, Ingrida
in
692/308/2779/777
,
692/53/2423
,
692/699/67/1857
2024
ProBio is the first outcome-adaptive platform trial in prostate cancer utilizing a Bayesian framework to evaluate efficacy within predefined biomarker signatures across systemic treatments. Prospective circulating tumor DNA and germline DNA analysis was performed in patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer before randomization to androgen receptor pathway inhibitors (ARPIs), taxanes or a physician’s choice control arm. The primary endpoint was the time to no longer clinically benefitting (NLCB). Secondary endpoints included overall survival and (serious) adverse events. Upon reaching the time to NLCB, patients could be re-randomized. The primary endpoint was met after 218 randomizations. ARPIs demonstrated ~50% longer time to NLCB compared to taxanes (median, 11.1 versus 6.9 months) and the physician’s choice arm (median, 11.1 versus 7.4 months) in the biomarker-unselected or ‘all’ patient population. ARPIs demonstrated longer overall survival (median, 38.7 versus 21.7 and 21.8 months for taxanes and physician’s choice, respectively). Biomarker signature findings suggest that the largest increase in time to NLCB was observed in
AR
(single-nucleotide variant/genomic structural rearrangement)-negative and
TP53
wild-type patients and
TMPRSS2–ERG
fusion-positive patients, whereas no difference between ARPIs and taxanes was observed in
TP53
-altered patients. In summary, ARPIs outperform taxanes and physician’s choice treatment in patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer with detectable circulating tumor DNA. ClinicalTrials.gov registration:
NCT03903835
.
In a biomarker-driven, outcome-adaptive platform trial for patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer, androgen receptor pathway inhibitors showed longer survival with respect to taxanes and physician’s choice treatment.
Journal Article
Lutetium-177–PSMA-617 for Metastatic Castration-Resistant Prostate Cancer
2021
Guiding the beta-emitting isotope lutetium-177 to prostate cancer lesions with the prostate-specific membrane antigen–targeted radioligand
177
Lu-PSMA-617 plus using standard care was compared with standard care in patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer. The radioligand therapy prolonged progression-free and overall survival. Adverse effects were more common, but quality of life was maintained.
Journal Article
Fifteen-Year Outcomes after Monitoring, Surgery, or Radiotherapy for Prostate Cancer
by
Gillatt, David
,
Martin, Richard M.
,
Bollina, Prasad
in
Aged
,
Androgen Antagonists - therapeutic use
,
Androgens
2023
In men with prostate cancer on PSA screening, radical treatments led to half the incidence of metastasis and local progression as active monitoring without affecting disease-specific or overall survival.
Journal Article
ADT with SBRT versus SBRT alone for hormone-sensitive oligorecurrent prostate cancer (RADIOSA): a randomised, open-label, phase 2 clinical trial
by
Tang, Chad
,
Mistretta, Francesco Alessandro
,
Fodor, Cristiana
in
Adenocarcinoma
,
Adverse events
,
Aged
2025
Metastasis-directed therapy by stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) has been shown to improve clinical outcomes in the oligometastatic prostate cancer setting. We aimed to investigate whether short-course androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) and SBRT at all oligometastatic sites versus SBRT alone improves clinical progression-free survival in men with metachronous oligorecurrent hormone-sensitive prostate cancer.
The RADIOSA study was a single-centre, randomised, open-label, controlled phase 2 trial done in the European Institute of Oncology, IRCCS, Milan, Italy. Key eligibility criteria were histologically proven initial diagnosis of adenocarcinoma of the prostate, biochemical progression after radical local prostate treatment, nodal relapse in the pelvis, extra-regional nodal relapse, bone metastases at next-generation imaging with a maximum of three lesions, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance status 0–1, and age 18 years or older. Participants were stratified according to prostate-specific membrane antigen doubling time (≤3 vs >3 months), metastases localisation (node vs bone), and diagnostic imaging (positron emission tomography vs MRI) and were randomly assigned (1:1) using a computer-generated random number to SBRT alone or SBRT in combination with 6 months of ADT. For SBRT treatment, a schedule of 30 Gy in three fractions every other day (with the equivalent dose in 2 Gy fractions being 98·6 Gy, considering α/β ratio of 1·5 Gy and biologically effective dose of >100 Gy), or equivalent regimens depending on disease site location, was administered. Patients in the SBRT with ADT group received 6 months of ADT with a luteinising hormone-releasing hormone analogue within 1 week before the start of SBRT. The allocated treatment was not masked. The primary outcome measure was clinical progression-free survival. All analyses followed a modified intention-to-treat principle, consisting of all patients assigned to a treatment group who had available data. The trial is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02680587, and is complete.
Between Aug 1, 2019, and April 30, 2023, 218 patients were assessed for eligibility, 113 were excluded, and 105 were enrolled and randomly assigned to an intervention (52 to SBRT only and 53 to SBRT with ADT). Three patients were lost to follow-up and 51 patients in each group were assessed for the primary outcome. The median age at study enrolment was 70 years (IQR 65–75); data on race and ethnicity were not collected. With a median follow-up of 31 months (IQR 16–36) for both groups, the median clinical progression-free survival was 15·1 months (95% CI 12·4–22·8) for the SBRT group versus 32·2 months (22·4–not reached) for the SBRT with ADT group (hazard ratio 0·43 [95% CI 0·26–0·72], p=0·0010]). One gastrointestinal grade 1 adverse event (SBRT group) and one genitourinary grade 3 adverse event (left ureter stenosis, SBRT with ADT group) were reported, with no late toxicities observed. 22 grade 1 ADT-related adverse events were reported, all of which had resolved at the last follow-up. No treatment-related deaths were recorded.
To our knowledge, the RADIOSA trial represents the first randomised trial in the metachronous oligometastatic hormone-sensitive prostate cancer setting to report improved clinical progression-free survival with the combination of SBRT and a short course of ADT, although carefully selected patients might still benefit from SBRT alone. By demonstrating improved clinical progression-free survival, the RADIOSA trial reinforces the role of metastasis-directed therapy in delaying systemic treatment escalation. Additionally, it underscores the need for further studies to determine the optimal duration of ADT and identify biomarkers predicting response to SBRT alone.
Italian Association of Cancer Research.
Journal Article
Abiraterone plus Prednisone in Metastatic, Castration-Sensitive Prostate Cancer
by
Todd, Mary B
,
Feyerabend, Susan
,
Chi, Kim N
in
Abiraterone Acetate - administration & dosage
,
Abiraterone Acetate - adverse effects
,
Adult
2017
The addition of abiraterone, a drug that blocks endogenous androgen synthesis, to standard androgen-deprivation therapy in patients with newly diagnosed, metastatic prostate cancer significantly increased overall survival, with a low rate of adverse effects.
Journal Article
Phase 3 Trial of Stereotactic Body Radiotherapy in Localized Prostate Cancer
by
Armstrong, John
,
Jain, Suneil
,
Manning, Georgina
in
Aged
,
Cancer therapies
,
Clinical outcomes
2024
A randomized trial showed noninferiority of stereotactic body radiotherapy to conventionally or moderately hypofractionated radiotherapy in preventing biochemical recurrence in selected men with localized prostate cancer.
Journal Article
Abiraterone for Prostate Cancer Not Previously Treated with Hormone Therapy
by
Parker, Christopher C
,
Russell, J. Martin
,
Robinson, Angus
in
Abiraterone Acetate - administration & dosage
,
Abiraterone Acetate - adverse effects
,
Adult
2017
The addition of abiraterone and prednisolone to standard androgen-deprivation therapy as the first treatment for patients with locally advanced or metastatic prostate cancer improved overall and failure-free survival, with a small increase in high-grade toxic effects.
Journal Article
Radical Prostatectomy or Watchful Waiting in Prostate Cancer — 29-Year Follow-up
2018
At 23 years of follow-up in the SPCG-4 trial, mortality among men who underwent radical prostatectomy was 11.7 percentage points lower than that among men whose condition was managed by watchful waiting. Radical prostatectomy was associated with a mean of nearly 3 years of extra life.
Journal Article
10-Year Outcomes after Monitoring, Surgery, or Radiotherapy for Localized Prostate Cancer
2016
In the ProtecT trial, over 1600 men with PSA-detected localized prostate cancer were assigned to active monitoring, prostatectomy, or radiotherapy. Although more patients assigned to active monitoring had disease progression, overall survival was similar in the three groups.
The management of clinically localized prostate cancer that is detected on the basis of prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels remains controversial. In the United States alone, an estimated 180,890 cases will be diagnosed in 2016, and 26,120 men will die from the disease.
1
The widespread use of PSA testing has resulted in a dramatic increase in the diagnosis and treatment of prostate cancer, but many men do not benefit from intervention because the disease is either indolent or disseminated at diagnosis. Prostate cancer often progresses slowly, and many men die of competing causes. In addition, interventions for prostate cancer can have . . .
Journal Article
Radiation with or without Antiandrogen Therapy in Recurrent Prostate Cancer
by
Major, Pierre P
,
Bahary, Jean-Paul
,
Pisansky, Thomas M
in
Aged
,
Aged, 80 and over
,
Androgen Antagonists - adverse effects
2017
With a median follow-up of 13 years, a randomized comparison of radiotherapy with or without antiandrogen therapy in patients with a rising PSA level after prostatectomy showed that 2 years of antiandrogen therapy resulted in a significantly higher overall survival rate.
Patients with localized prostatic cancer are often treated with radical prostatectomy. More than 30% of such patients will subsequently have recurrence. This recurrence manifests first as a rising serum level of prostate-specific antigen (PSA),
1
–
3
termed biochemical recurrence. Large, retrospective studies suggest that salvage radiation therapy after biochemical recurrence may be associated with long-term freedom from cancer recurrence.
4
,
5
However, 50% of the patients who are treated with salvage radiation therapy will have further disease progression, particularly when there are aggressive disease features.
4
–
7
The combination of radiation therapy and either androgen-deprivation therapy or antiandrogen therapy prolongs survival among some . . .
Journal Article