Radiation with or without Antiandrogen Therapy in Recurrent Prostate Cancer
Juravinski Hospital · Massachusetts General Hospital · +16 more institutions
Abstract
Salvage radiation therapy is often necessary in men who have undergone radical prostatectomy and have evidence of prostate-cancer recurrence signaled by a persistently or recurrently elevated prostate-specific antigen (PSA) level. Whether antiandrogen therapy with radiation therapy will further improve cancer control and prolong overall survival is unknown.
In a double-blind, placebo-controlled trial conducted from 1998 through 2003, we assigned 760 eligible patients who had undergone prostatectomy with a lymphadenectomy and had disease, as assessed on pathological testing, with a tumor stage of T2 (confined to the prostate but with a positive surgical margin) or T3 (with histologic extension beyond the prostatic capsule), no nodal involvement, and a detectable PSA level of 0.2 to 4.0 ng per milliliter to undergo radiation therapy and receive either antiandrogen therapy (24 months of bicalutamide at a dose of 150 mg daily) or daily placebo tablets during and after radiation therapy. The primary end point was the rate of overall survival.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 64.20
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 29
Authors
22- WUWilliam U. ShipleyCorresponding
Juravinski Hospital, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard University, Indiana University – Purdue University Indianapolis
- WSWendy Seiferheld
Juravinski Hospital, Indiana University – Purdue University Indianapolis, NRG Oncology
- HLHimanshu Lukka
Indiana University – Purdue University Indianapolis, Juravinski Hospital, Juravinski Cancer Centre, Hamilton Health Sciences
- PMPierre Major
Juravinski Cancer Centre, Juravinski Hospital, Hamilton Health Sciences, Indiana University – Purdue University Indianapolis
- NMNiall M. Heney
Harvard University, Juravinski Hospital, Indiana University – Purdue University Indianapolis, Massachusetts General Hospital
Topics & keywords
- Prostate cancer
- Medicine
- Prostatectomy
- Radiation therapy
- Antiandrogen
- Prostate-specific antigen
- Urology
- Oncology
- Good health and well-being