4.8 Article

Endocrine treatment, with or without radiotherapy, in locally advanced prostate cancer (SPCG-7/SFUO-3): an open randomised phase III trial

Journal

LANCET
Volume 373, Issue 9660, Pages 301-308

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(08)61815-2

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Schering-Plough Inc
  2. Abbott Scandinavia Inc
  3. Nordic Cancer Union
  4. Swedish Cancer Society [070604]
  5. Norwegian Cancer Society
  6. Lions Cancer Foundation
  7. Umea University

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Background Several studies have shown the efficacy of endocrine therapy in combination with radiotherapy in high-risk prostate cancer. To assess the effect of radiotherapy, we did an open phase III study comparing endocrine therapy with and without local radiotherapy, followed by castration on progression. Methods This randomised trial included men frorn 47 centres in Norway, Sweden, and Denmark. Between February, 1996, and December, 2002,875 patients with locally advanced prostate cancer (T3; 78%; PSA<70; N0; M0) were centrally randomly assigned by computer to endocrine treatment alone (3 months of total androgen blockade followed by continuous endocrine treatment using flutamide; 439 patients), or to the same endocrine treatment combined with radiotherapy (436 patients). The primary endpoint was prostate-cancer-specific survival, and analysis was by intention to treat. This study is registered as an international standard randomised controlled trial, number ISRCTN01534787. Findings After a median follow-tip of 7.6 years, 79 men in the endocrine alone group and 37 men in the endocrine plus radiotherapy group had died of prostate cancer. The cumulative incidence at 10 years for prostate-cancer-specific mortality was 23.9% in the endocrine alone group and 11.9% in the endocrine plus radiotherapy group (difference 12 . 0%, 95% Cl 4.9-19 . 1%), for a relative risk of 0 . 44 (0.30-0.66). At 1.0 years, the cumulative incidence for overall mortality was 39.4% in the endocrine alone group and 29.6% in the endocrine plus radiotherapy group (difference 9.8%, 0.8-18.8%), for a relative risk of 0.68 (0.52-0.89). Cumulative incidence at 10 years for PSA recurrence was substantially higher in men in the endocrine-alone group (74.7% vs 25.9%, p<0 . 0001; HR 0 . 16; 0 . 12-0.20). After 5 years, urinary, rectal, and sexual problems were slightly more frequent in the endocrine plus radiotherapy group. Interpretation In patients with locally advanced or high-risk local prostate cancer, addition of local radiotherapy to endocrine treatment halved the 10-year prostate-cancer-specific mortality, and substantially decreased overall mortality with fully acceptable risk of side-effects compared with endocrine treatment alone. in the light of these data, endocrine treatment plus radiotherapy should be the new standard. Funding Schering-Plough, Abbott Scandinavia, Nordic Cancer Union, Swedish Cancer Society (070604), Norwegian Cancer Society, Lions Cancer Foundation, and Umea University.

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