Addition of Metastasis-Directed Therapy to Intermittent Hormone Therapy for Oligometastatic Prostate Cancer
The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center · Banner MD Anderson Cancer Center · +2 more institutions
Abstract
Despite evidence demonstrating an overall survival benefit with up-front hormone therapy in addition to established synergy between hormone therapy and radiation, the addition of metastasis-directed therapy (MDT) to hormone therapy for oligometastatic prostate cancer, to date, has not been evaluated in a randomized clinical trial.
To determine in men with oligometastatic prostate cancer whether the addition of MDT to intermittent hormone therapy improves oncologic outcomes and preserves time with eugonadal testosterone compared with intermittent hormone therapy alone. Design, Setting, Participants: The External Beam Radiation to Eliminate Nominal Metastatic Disease (EXTEND) trial is a phase 2, basket randomized clinical trial for multiple solid tumors testing the addition of MDT to standard-of-care systemic therapy. Men aged 18 years or older with oligometastatic prostate cancer who had 5 or fewer metastases and were treated with hormone therapy for 2 or more months were enrolled to the prostate intermittent hormone therapy basket at multicenter tertiary cancer centers from September 2018 to November 2020. The cutoff date for the primary analysis was January 7, 2022. Interventions: Patients were randomized 1:1 to MDT, consisting of definitive radiation therapy to all sites of disease and intermittent hormone therapy (combined therapy arm; n = 43) or to hormone therapy only (n = 44). A planned break in hormone therapy occurred 6 months after enrollment, after which hormone therapy was withheld until progression. Main Outcomes and Measures: The primary end point was disease progression, defined as death or radiographic, clinical, or biochemical progression. A key predefined secondary end point was eugonadal progression-free survival (PFS), defined as the time from achieving a eugonadal testosterone level (≥150 ng/dL; to convert to nanomoles per liter, multiply by 0.0347) until progression. Exploratory measures included quality of life and systemic immune evaluation using flow cytometry and T-cell receptor sequencing.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 46.55
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 49
Authors
29- CTChad TangCorresponding
The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center
- ADAlexander D. Sherry
The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center
- CHCara Haymaker
The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center
- TBTharakeswara Bathala
The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center
- SLSuyu Liu
The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Hormone therapy
- Prostate cancer
- Clinical endpoint
- Radiation therapy
- Oncology
- Internal medicine
- Hormonal therapy
- Good health and well-being