Overview

Salvage Radiotherapy Combined With Hormonotherapy in Oligometastatic Pelvic Node Relapses of Prostate Cancer

Status:
Active, not recruiting
Trial end date:
2026-07-01
Target enrollment:
0
Participant gender:
Male
Summary
There is an increasing number of reports describing the existence of a proportion of prostate cancer patients who present with a reduced number of metastases (<5 lesions) at relapse. This oligometastatic status has also been recognized in other tumor types such as melanoma, soft tissue sarcoma, liver, lung, and breast cancer, and has influenced the management of these malignancies in that a more radical treatment such as surgical resection has been employed. Positron Emission Tomography-Computed Tomography (PET-CT) studies with tracers such as choline or acetate are reliable tools to help with the diagnosis of oligometastatic disease after biochemical treatment failure in prostate cancer. An aggressive treatment combining androgen depriving therapy (ADT) and and high-dose irradiation to the oligometastatic lesions, as detected by PET-CT, may be proposed for these oligometastatic patients. Such a treatment strategy may hypothetically succeed to prolong the failure-free interval between two consecutive ADT courses, or even cure selected patients with limited metastatic burden. In this study the investigators plan to assess biochemical or clinical relapse-free survival at 2 years of prostate cancer with 1-5 oligometastases treated concomitantly with high-dose conformal Radiation Therapy and LH-RH agonists.
Phase:
Phase 2
Accepts Healthy Volunteers?
No
Details
Lead Sponsor:
Institut Cancerologie de l'Ouest
Collaborator:
Astellas Pharma Inc
Treatments:
Leuprolide
Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:

1. Histologically proven adenocarcinoma of the prostate

2. Patients aged 18 years or more

3. PS 0-1

4. Previous radical treatment to the prostate (radiotherapy or surgery)

5. PSA increase of at least 3 assays in the same laboratory over the last 12 months.

6. 1-5 pelvic lymph node metastases detected with 18FCH-PET. A relapse in the dressing
prostatectomy is associated possible.

7. Upper limit of lymph node metastases: aortic bifurcation

8. Respect dosimetric constraints to organs at risk

9. Treatment with hormone therapy may be started before inclusion, to a maximum of three
months prior to Day 1 of radiotherapy. This hormone will necessarily be preceded by a
free interval treatment of at least 6 months since the last injection, by adding the
duration of action of this predictable injection (1, 3 or 6 months)

10. Patient affiliated to a social security scheme

11. Patient Information and written informed consent form signed

Exclusion Criteria:

1. bone or visceral metastatic relapse associated

2. para-aortic nodal relapse (the upper limit is tolerated aortic bifurcation)

3. more than 5 lymph node metastases

4. Proof of metastases at initial diagnosis

5. Evidence of distant metastases in the pelvic lymph nodes or outside the prostate bed

6. prior pelvic lymph nodes Irradiation. Irradiation of the bed of the prostate is not an
exclusion criterion, but the junction between prior irradiation bed prostatectomy and
radiation field pelvic lymph nodes should be examined carefully

7. castration resistance defined by clinical or biochemical progression despite a
combined androgen blockade

8. known contraindications to pelvic irradiation (eg, chronic inflammatory bowel disease,
...)

9. known contraindications to hormone therapy, according to standard recommendations in
force

10. serious Hypertension not controlled by appropriate treatment

11. Other concomitant cancer or history of cancer (within 5 years prior to study entry),
except basal cell or squamous cell carcinomas of the skin.

12. Patient with a psychological, familial, sociological or geographical potentially
hampering compliance with the study protocol and follow-up schedule

13. Patient already included in another interventional study involving the approval of a
CPP during his screening for the study OLIGOPELVIS

14. Private person of liberty or major trust