Low Risk Prostate Cancer Clinical Trial
Official title:
Active Surveillance With or Without a 6 Months Apalutamide Treatment in Low Risk Prostate Cancer: A Phase II Randomized Multicenter Trial
Many prostate cancer are slow or non progressive forms that would never impair quality or
quantity of like of life if undetected. For this localized prostate cancer, the
recommendation is an active surveillance, however often experienced by the patient as a lack
of care. Thus the introduction of new potent androgen receptor inhibitor raise the question
of the benefit of early hormonal therapy in localized prostate cancers.
The aim of this study is to assess whether treatment with an oral androgen receptor inhibitor
could influence the progression of localized prostate cancer and delay the time to local
treatment initiation.
Several cohort studies have demonstrated that survival time in patients with untreated early
stage prostate cancer is greater than 10 years in more than 70% of cases, suggesting the
existence of slowly progressive or non-progressive forms of prostate cancer that would never
cause any impairment to quality or quantity of life if undetected. These forms represent
currently 23% to 67% of all prostate cancers. Therefore, while men's lifetime risk of
prostate cancer is high (16-18%), the corresponding risk of death is only about 3%. These
observations gave the opportunity to consider, near the current standard and curative
treatment, an active surveillance. This therapeutically choice offers the ability to delay or
avoid definitive treatment, thereby minimizing patient morbidity. Studies to date have shown
that this seems to be achieved without compromising long term outcomes (progression-free
survival) in appropriately selected patients. Up to one third of them receive further
treatment after a median of about 2,5 years of surveillance. However, even if active
surveillance is associated with the highest quality-adjusted life expectancy when compared
with local treatment, active surveillance is often experienced as a lack of care, some
patients undergoing surveillance experience disutility related to anxiety which can
significantly affect their quality of life.
The introduction of new potent androgen receptor inhibitors able to block several steps in
the androgen receptors signaling pathway, raise the question again of the benefit of early
hormonal therapy in localized prostate cancers. The aim of this study is to assess whether
treatment with an oral androgen receptor inhibitor could influence the progression of
localized prostate cancer and delay the time to local treatment initiation.
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