Prostate Cancer Clinical Trial
Official title:
CSP #719B - Prospective Cohort of Early Stage Prostate Cancer
Environmental factors such as diet and cigarette smoking may play a role in predicting the progression of early stage prostate cancer to advance disease. The goal of this project is to establish an observational cohort of patients with early stage prostate cancer who elect not to undergo radical prostatectomy or radiation therapy to evaluate risk factors which predict the transformation of early stage to clinically aggressive disease.
Primary Objective: Evaluate risk factors which predict the transformation of early stage to
clinically aggressive disease.
Intervention: None
Study Abstract: Environmental factors such as diet and cigarette smoking may play a role in
predicting the progression of early stage prostate cancer to advance disease. The goal of
this project is to establish an observational cohort of patients with early stage prostate
cancer who elect not to undergo radical prostatectomy or radiation therapy to evaluate risk
factors which predict the transformation of early stage to clinically aggressive disease.
A total of 1,000 US male veterans with early stage prostate cancer will be recruited to
participate in the study. In order to maximize African-American participation, VA medical
centers that serve large minority populations will be utilized for recruitment. Eligible
participants must have an early stage prostate cancer diagnosis (T0-T2) with no known
involved lymph nodes or metastases, and no prior history of cancer (with the exception of
nonmelanoma skin cancer) or other major illness that would preclude long term participation.
Individuals willing to participate will be administered a lifestyle questionnaire and a
dietary assessment. The lifestyle survey ascertains baseline demographics, mode of cancer
diagnosis, medical history, smoking, family history of prostate cancer, alcohol use, level
of physical activity, and other potential risk factors for prostate cancer progression.
Nutritional parameters will be measured through a self-administered, semi-quantitative food
frequency questionnaire. A blood specimen will also be collected for genetic and biochemical
research. Participants will be followed annually with additional lifestyle and dietary
questionnaires.
Both surveys are currently being tested through a pilot project in a population of prostate
cancer survivors to assess the feasibility of collecting diet and lifestyle data in veterans
and to refine the study methods and recruitment strategies (the current versions of the
surveys are included).
A pilot study is being conducted to test different survey types and mailing techniques. The
results from the pilot project will help improve the survey methodology and refine the
survey research tools to accurately assess dietary and lifestyle factors. Lifestyle surveys
have been created to ascertain baseline demographics and potential risk factors for prostate
cancer survival and progression. Two versions have been generated to test participant
response to varying survey lengths (a short form vs. a long form). The initial mailing of
the lifestyle and dietary surveys was directed to 836 veterans diagnosed with prostate
cancer in the Boston VA Healthcare Network (ICD-9 code in patient treatment files). Surveys
were sent to 132 African-American veterans, 342 white veterans, and 362 veterans with no
known race. An Access database has been developed to track survey response and blood
collection sites have been established in VA health facilities in the Boston area. A phone
tracking system has been established to answer participants questions about the survey. A
total of 251 (30%) of the veterans completed the surveys and 72% agreed to provide blood
samples. The response rate was 11% for African-Americans, 28% for whites, and 27% for
unknown race. Follow-up mailings are currently being sent to veterans who didn't respond to
the initial survey request. A telephone survey is being designed to target African-American
non-responders to improve survey response in this cohort.
Prostate cancer is the most commonly diagnosed cancer in men and the second most common
cause of cancer deaths among men in the United States. Counseling patients with early stage
disease about treatment options is extremely difficult since the relative benefit of
different approaches is not known. The evidence to date indicates that there is no clear
benefit with invasive intervention over watchful waiting. In addition, little is known about
risk factors which predict the transformation of early stage prostate cancer to clinically
aggressive disease. This is of particular concern in the VA since more than a third of all
veterans are over age 65. The ability to differentiate individuals with early stage prostate
cancer from those with disease that will become clinically aggressive would have enormous
benefits. It would help allay the anxiety of those with indolent disease and potentially
reduce the morbidity and mortality of those with disease likely to become clinically
aggressive.
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Observational Model: Cohort, Time Perspective: Prospective
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