Stage II Prostate Carcinoma Clinical Trial
Official title:
Prospective Endoscopic Safety Evaluation of Late Rectal Mucosal Injury Following CyberKnife Radiosurgery for Clinically Localized Prostate Cancer
Verified date | August 2018 |
Source | Georgetown University |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
Radiation therapy is a well-established treatment modality for clinically localized prostate
cancer. Men who choose to undergo radiation treatments for prostate cancer will have to live
with the side effects for many years. Attempts have been made to protect surrounding tissues
while delivering high dosage of radiation to cancer. With the rectum being so close to the
prostate, many patients still suffer from side effects caused by radiation injury to the
rectum, especially those who received conventional external beam radiotherapy.
CyberKnife is an FDA approved radiosurgical devise. Its flexible robotic arm allows radiation
beams to be delivered in different directions, providing a highly conformal, uniform dose
with steep dose gradients. Therefore, treatment with the CyberKnife radiosurgical system
should minimize the toxicity to the surrounding structures. CyberKnife System also
incorporates a dynamic tracking system to allow the robot to correct the targeting of
therapeutic beams during treatment. These improvements allow for dose escalation within the
prostate with less normal tissue toxicity.
The purpose of this study is to estimate the proportion of patients with endoscopically
detectable telangiectasia as the indication of radiation injury to the rectum, after
CyberKnife Treatment for prostate cancer.
Status | Terminated |
Enrollment | 4 |
Est. completion date | December 2012 |
Est. primary completion date | December 2012 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | Male |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Histologically confirmed adenocarcinoma of the prostate (Biopsy within one year of enrollment) - Signed Study-Specific Consent - PSA within 60 days of registration - Baseline American Urological Association (AUA)/ International Prognostic Scoring System (IPSS) score of < 20 - Candidate for screening colonoscopy - Pretreatment Colonoscopy/lower endoscopy done Exclusion Criteria: - Prior pelvic radiotherapy - Prior radical prostate surgery - Recent (within 5 years) or concurrent cancers other than non-melanoma skin cancer - Implanted hardware adjacent to the prostate that would prohibit appropriate treatment planning and/or treatment delivery - Inflammatory bowel disease |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | MedStar Georgetown University Hospital | Washington | Virginia |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Georgetown University |
United States,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Proportion of Patients With Endoscopically Detectable-telangiectasia (VRS Grade 1 or Higher). | Telangiectasia is the primary outcome since it is a measure of tissue fibrosis (primary source of proctitis) and is a well-defined and measurable outcome. No patients had outcome before the trial was terminated. |
Planned for 7 years, collected up to 23 months | |
Secondary | Proportion of Patients With Rectal Bleeding. | Planned for 7 years, collected up to 23 months | ||
Secondary | Progression-free Survival | Progression-free survival will be defined as the time in months from study entry until progression or death. Patients who are alive and free from progression on the date of closing follow-up will be censored on that date. Data table reports the number of participants who were alive without progression at the end of the study. | Planned for 7 years, collected up to 23 months |
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