Overview

Clinical Study of SU011248 in Subjects With High Risk Prostate Cancer Who Have Elected to Undergo Radical Prostatectomy

Status:
Completed
Trial end date:
1969-12-31
Target enrollment:
0
Participant gender:
Male
Summary
Prostate cancer is prevalent in the United States, with approximately 230,110 new cases and 29,900 deaths in 2004. Approximately 30% of new cases will be clinical stage T3 when they are diagnosed. This is a stage in which there is high probability that the cancer has spread beyond the prostate gland itself, making it much more difficult to treat. In these cases, when surgery is done by itself and the prostate is removed, it is still very likely that some cancer that has spread beyond the prostate remains and will get worse. Radiation applied to the prostate also does not work well on tumors that have spread beyond the prostate. Even surgery and radiation combined have not eliminated the problems caused by prostate cancer that has spread into the tissue outside the prostate itself. New treatments are needed to deal with prostate cancer at this more serious stage. Study doctors believe that it might be possible to shrink the prostate cancer using a new drug called SUO11248 or Sunitinib. After the patients take the drug, study doctors believe the cancer will shrink back to within the prostate, and they can then surgically remove the prostate and all the cancer. Patients on this study also will be given increasing doses of Sunitinib to find out how much of the drug can be given safely.
Phase:
Phase 1
Accepts Healthy Volunteers?
No
Details
Lead Sponsor:
Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center
Collaborator:
Pfizer
Treatments:
Sunitinib
Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:

- Histologically confirmed adenocarcinoma of the prostate glad.

- Informed of, willing, and able to comply with, the requirements of the investigational
study and have signed a written informed consent in accordance with institutional
regulatory guidelines.

- Subjects defined as being at high risk for disease relapse based on the following
criteria: PSA > 10 ng/ml, and any one of the following: Gleason > 7 or T stage > T2b.

- Patients must have elected to and are a candidate to undergo a radical prostatectomy.

- Males greater than 18 years of age and less than or equal to 75 years of age
(physiologic) any racial/ethnic group.

- Free of significant abnormal findings as determined by screening history, physical
exam, vital signs (blood pressure, heart rate, respiration rate, and temperature), and
urinalysis.

- Performance status: ECOG < 2.

- Life expectancy of at least 5 years.

- Absolute granulocyte count > 1,500/mm3.

- Platelet count > 100,000.

- Hemoglobin > 9.0 g/dL.

- Serum calcium < 12.0 mg/dL Adequate hepatic function as evidenced by ALT and AST
values within normal range. Adequate organ function as defined by the following
criteria: Serum aspartate transaminase (AST; serum glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase
[SGOT]) and serum alanine transaminase (ALT; serum glutamic pyruvic transaminase
[SGPT]) < 2.5 x local laboratory upper limit of normal (ULN), or AST and ALT < 5 x ULN
if liver function abnormalities are due to underlying malignancy.

- Creatinine < 1.5 ULN.

Exclusion Criteria:

- Patients who have stage T2a or less prostate cancer, Gleason < 6, PSA <10-ng/mL.

- Prior hormonal, surgical, radiopharmaceutical or radiation therapy, cryotherapy,
biological response modifiers, or systematic chemotherapy to treat prostatic
carcinoma.

- Surgery within four weeks of study entry.

- Evidence of regional and/or distant metastases.

- Use of an investigational drug within 30 days prior to study entry.

- NCI CTCAE Version 3.0 grade 3 hemorrhage within 4 weeks of starting the study
treatment.

- Any of the following thing the 12 months prior to study drug administration:
myocardial infarction, severe/unstable angina, coronary/peripheral artery bypass
graft, symptomatic congestive heart failure, cerebrovascular accident or transient
ischemic attack, or pulmonary embolism.

- Ongoing cardiac dysrhythmias of NCI CTCAE Version 3.0 grade > 2.

- Prolonged QTc interval on baseline EKG.

- Uncontrolled Hypertension (>150/100 mm Hg despite optimal medical therapy).

- Patients receiving CYP3A4 inducers or inhibitors; patients should not take grapefruit
juice or St. John's Wort while on the study

- Known active infection.