Abiraterone for Prostate Cancer Not Previously Treated with Hormone Therapy
University of Birmingham · Cancer Research UK · +37 more institutions
Abstract
Abiraterone acetate plus prednisolone improves survival in men with relapsed prostate cancer. We assessed the effect of this combination in men starting long-term androgen-deprivation therapy (ADT), using a multigroup, multistage trial design.
We randomly assigned patients in a 1:1 ratio to receive ADT alone or ADT plus abiraterone acetate (1000 mg daily) and prednisolone (5 mg daily) (combination therapy). Local radiotherapy was mandated for patients with node-negative, nonmetastatic disease and encouraged for those with positive nodes. For patients with nonmetastatic disease with no radiotherapy planned and for patients with metastatic disease, treatment continued until radiologic, clinical, or prostate-specific antigen (PSA) progression; otherwise, treatment was to continue for 2 years or until any type of progression, whichever came first. The primary outcome measure was overall survival. The intermediate primary outcome was failure-free survival (treatment failure was defined as radiologic, clinical, or PSA progression or death from prostate cancer).
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 165.33
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 30
Authors
47- NDNicholas D. JamesCorresponding
University of Birmingham, Cancer Research UK, University College London
- JSJohann S. de Bono
Institute of Cancer Research, Cancer Research UK, University College London
- MSMelissa Spears
Medical Research Council, University College London, Cancer Research UK
- NWNoel W. Clarke
Salford Royal NHS Foundation Trust, University College London, Cancer Research UK
- MDMalcolm D. Mason
Cancer Research UK, University College London, Cardiff University
Topics & keywords
- Abiraterone acetate
- Prostate cancer
- Abiraterone
- Androgen deprivation therapy
- Medicine
- Oncology
- Internal medicine
- Testosterone (patch)
- Good health and well-being