Phase 3, Multicenter, Randomized Study, Evaluating the Efficacy and Tolerability of Focused HIFU (High Intensity Focused Ultrasound) Therapy Compared to Active Surveillance in Patients With Significant Low Risk Prostate Cancer (HIFUSA)

February 27, 2024 updated by: Hospices Civils de Lyon

Phase 3, Multicenter, Randomized Study, Evaluating the Efficacy and Tolerability of Focused HIFU Therapy Compared to Active Surveillance in Patients With Significant Low Risk Prostate Cancer

The percentage of malignant prostate tumors detected very early is constantly increasing and the number of well differentiated tumors, with small volume and low risk of progression increases. When a tumor of this type is identified, radical prostatectomy remains the reference treatment, but this treatment is not without side effects. Active surveillance is a strategy which aims at detecting an early development of the cancerous disease in order to propose curative treatment in a timely manner and thus improve specific survival. Patients are therefore re-evaluated each year by rectal examination, PSA (Prostate-Specific Antigen) assay. Active surveillance remains difficult to manage psychologically for both the patient and the practitioner, because of the lack of treatment on the one hand and a rate of non-curable cancers close to 50% when signs of progression trigger a radical treatment.

The aim of the focal treatment HIFU (High Intensity Focused Ultrasound) is to destroy the cancer without causing side effects in contrast to radical treatments. It is in this sense that it is positioned both as an alternative to radical surgery and as an alternative to active surveillance.

Study Overview

Study Type

Interventional

Enrollment (Actual)

108

Phase

  • Phase 3

Contacts and Locations

This section provides the contact details for those conducting the study, and information on where this study is being conducted.

Study Contact

Study Locations

      • Aix-en-Provence, France, 13100
        • Polyclinique du parc Rambot
      • Besançon, France, 25044
        • Clinique Saint-Vincent
      • Bordeaux, France, 33076
        • Groupe Hospitalier Pellegrin - Chu
      • Bordeaux, France, 33000
        • Service d'Urologie, Clinique Tivoli Ducos
      • Colmar, France, 68024
        • Service d'Urologie, CHU de Guebwiller Colmar
      • Lille, France, 59000
        • Service d'Urologie CHRU de Lille, Hôpital HURIEZ
      • Lille, France, 59000
        • Service d'Urologie Générale de Santé - Hôpital Privé La Louvière
      • Lyon, France, 69437
        • Service d'Urologie et Chirurgie de la Transplantation, Hôpital Edouard Herriot,
      • Marseille, France, 13915
        • Service d'urologie Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Marseille - Hôpital Marseille Nord
      • Paris, France, 75014
        • Département d'Urologie, Institut Montsouris
      • Pierre-bénite, France, 69495
        • Centre Hospitalier Lyon Sud
      • Saint-Herblain, France, 44800
        • Clinique Urologique Nantes Atlantis
      • Suresnes, France, 92150
        • Service d'Urologie, Hôpital Foch
      • Toulouse, France, 31400
        • CHU de Toulouse - Hopital de Rangueil

Participation Criteria

Researchers look for people who fit a certain description, called eligibility criteria. Some examples of these criteria are a person's general health condition or prior treatments.

Eligibility Criteria

Ages Eligible for Study

50 years to 80 years (Adult, Older Adult)

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Description

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Patient having been clearly informed of the study and having accepted, with sufficient reflection time, to participate by signing the informed consent form of the study.
  • Age between 50 and 80 years with a life expectancy of more than 5 years. Patients between the ages of 75 and 80 will need to have G8 score > 14.
  • Initial diagnosis of localized prostate cancer (T1c or T2a) with the following characteristics:

    • Only one Target tumor on MRI on a maximum of 2 contigous sextants. Case allowed:

      • If more than one target tumor on MRI, only one of them must be confirmed by targeted prostate biopsies.
      • If no target tumor on MRI, only 2 contigous sextants must be positive on prostate biopsies
    • A maximum tumor length> 3 mm or at least 3 positive biopsies on all biopsies performed (randomized biopsies and/or MRI/Ultrasound Fusion-Guided Prostate Biopsy).
    • Gleason 6 score (risk group 1 of the D'Amico classification).
    • Tumor positioned so that a safety distance of at least 9 mm from external sphincter can be defined during HIFU-FOCAL treatment in prostate tissue around the target.
  • PSA ≤ 15ng / ml.
  • Patient affiliated with health insurance or beneficiary of an equivalent plan.

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Contraindications to treatment with HIFU-F:

    • Tumor not accessible.
    • Multiple intra prostatic calcifications inducing, on ultrasound, a shadow cone in the prostate preventing the penetration of ultrasound and thus the realization of the treatment.
    • History of pelvic irradiation
    • Presence of an implant (stent, catheter) located less than 1 cm from the treatment area.
    • Fistula of the urinary tract or rectum.
    • Anal or rectal fibrosis, anal or rectal stenosis or other abnormalities making it difficult to insert the Focal One® probe.
    • Anatomical abnormality of the rectum or rectal mucosa.
    • Patient with artificial sphincter, penile prosthesis or intra prostatic implant, eg stent.
    • History of intestinal inflammatory pathology.
    • Uro-genital infection in progress (the infection to be treated before HIFU treatment).
    • Anterior surgery at the level of the anus or rectum making the introduction of the probe impossible.
    • Allergy to latex.
    • Thickness of the rectal wall> 10mm.
  • TURP indication. Bladder neck incision is allowed .
  • Patient with a medical contraindication to Sonovue® injection.
  • Patient with a medical contraindication on MRI.
  • Patient already treated for prostate cancer (hormone therapy, radiotherapy, surgery).
  • History of uncontrolled cancer and / or treated for less than 5 years (with the exception of basal cell skin cancer).
  • History of sclerosis of the bladder neck or urethral stenosis.
  • Patient with a several bleeding risk according to medical advice (patient with oral anticoagulant therapy must receive an alternative therapy if randomized in HIFU-F arm).
  • Patients with unstable neurological pathology.
  • Patient who has been treated for a therapeutic trial within 30 days of enrollment or who wishes to participate in an ongoing study that may interfere with this study.
  • Legal person protected by law.
  • Patient not able to understand the objectives of the study or refusing to comply with postoperative instructions.

Study Plan

This section provides details of the study plan, including how the study is designed and what the study is measuring.

How is the study designed?

Design Details

  • Primary Purpose: Treatment
  • Allocation: Randomized
  • Interventional Model: Parallel Assignment
  • Masking: None (Open Label)

Arms and Interventions

Participant Group / Arm
Intervention / Treatment
Experimental: HIFU treatment

65 patients will receive the immediate treatment with focal HIFU in order to destroy the cancer without causing side effects. HIFU treatment will be conducted with the Focal One® device. The treatment area will be defined using MRI data and 3D biopsies. A safety distance of at least 9 mm will be defined around the tumor. An intraoperative contrast echocardiographic control will be performed to evaluate the necrotic area. If necessary, additional HIFU lesions will be performed during the same session. In case of residual tumor demonstrated during control biopsies, additional treatment of this tumor with focal HIFU may be proposed.

Patients randomized in this arm will also have PSA dosage, MRI exam, questionnaires and prostatic biopsies during their follow up.

HIFU treatment will be conducted with the Focal One® device. The treatment area will be defined using MRI data and 3D biopsies. A safety distance of at least 9 mm will be defined around the tumor. An intraoperative contrast echocardiographic control will be performed to evaluate the necrotic area. If necessary, additional HIFU lesions will be performed during the same session. In case of residual tumor demonstrated during control biopsies, additional treatment of this tumor with focal HIFU may be proposed.
PSA dosage will be regularly performed during patient follow up thanks to blood sampling.
MRI exam will be regularly performed during patient follow up.
Prostatic biopsies will be regularly performed during patient follow up.
Patients will have to complete five questionnaires during their follow up : QLQ-C30 (Quality of Life questionnaire), EPIC-26 (The Expanded Prostate Cancer Index Composite), IPSS (International Prostate Score Symptom), IIEF-5 (The International Index of Erectile Function), STAI-YB (State-Trait Anxiety Inventory)
Active Comparator: Active surveillance

65 patients will be randomized to active surveillance and will have exactly the same follow-up as treated patients excepting the HIFU treatment.

Active surveillance is a therapeutic option that shifts the eventual moment of curative treatment while remaining within a window of curability of the disease.

Patients randomized in this arm will also have PSA dosage, MRI exam, questionnaires and prostatic biopsies during their follow up.

PSA dosage will be regularly performed during patient follow up thanks to blood sampling.
MRI exam will be regularly performed during patient follow up.
Prostatic biopsies will be regularly performed during patient follow up.
Patients will have to complete five questionnaires during their follow up : QLQ-C30 (Quality of Life questionnaire), EPIC-26 (The Expanded Prostate Cancer Index Composite), IPSS (International Prostate Score Symptom), IIEF-5 (The International Index of Erectile Function), STAI-YB (State-Trait Anxiety Inventory)

What is the study measuring?

Primary Outcome Measures

Outcome Measure
Measure Description
Time Frame
patient proportion who needed to seek radical treatment
Time Frame: 48 month

The primary endpoint is the comparison between the 2 groups of the proportion of patient converting to a radical treatment at 48 months of follow-up. Conversion to a radical treatment is define as a medical decision based on the following criteria:

  • An increase in Gleason score to a score 7 (3 + 4) with bilateral involvement (Gleason 6 or 7).
  • An increase in the Gleason score to a score 7 (3 + 4) with tumor whose location is not compatible with a focal treatment (impossibility to apply safety margins of 9mm).
  • An increase in Gleason score to a score of 7 (4 + 3) or higher.
  • Risk of lymph node invasion> 5% (calculated with the MSKCC nomogram)
  • An extension of the tumor beyond the prostatic capsule (MRI and / or biopsies).
  • Appearance of pelvic ganglion metastases.
48 month

Secondary Outcome Measures

Outcome Measure
Measure Description
Time Frame
Overall survival
Time Frame: 48 months
Overall survival at 48 months will be measured from the date of inclusion to the date of death, all causes of death combined or the date of last new or point date to 48 months.
48 months
Prostate cancer specific survival
Time Frame: 48 months
Prostate cancer specific survival at 48 months will be measured from the date of inclusion to the date of death related to prostate cancer or the date of last new or point date to 48 months
48 months
proportion of patients needing additional treatment
Time Frame: 24 months
The objective is to compare between the 2 groups the proportion of patients needing additional treatment (focal or radical) at 24 months. This includes patients who wish or require radical treatment (prostatectomy, radiotherapy), total focal treatment, focal treatment for patients in the active surveillance group or additional treatment for patients in the treatment group.
24 months
proportion of patients needing additional treatment
Time Frame: 48 months
The objective is to compare between the 2 groups the proportion of patients needing additional treatment (focal or radical) at 48 months. This includes patients who wish or require radical treatment (prostatectomy, radiotherapy), total focal treatment, focal treatment for patients in the active surveillance group or additional treatment for patients in the treatment group.
48 months
rate of positive biopsies
Time Frame: 24 months
The rate of positive biopsies in the untreated lobe and treated lobe evaluated and will be used to evaluate the oncological evolution at 24 months.
24 months
rate of positive biopsies
Time Frame: 48 months
The rate of positive biopsies in the untreated lobe and treated lobe will be measured and will be used to evaluate the oncological evolution at 48 months.
48 months
clinically significant cancer rate
Time Frame: 24 months
The clinically significant cancer rate (Gleason 7 or invasion of more than 3 biopsies or invasion> 3 mm regardless of Gleason) in the untreated lobe and the treated lobe will be measured and will be used to evaluate the oncological evolution at 24 months.
24 months
clinically significant cancer rate
Time Frame: 48 months
The clinically significant cancer rate (Gleason 7 or invasion of more than 3 biopsies or invasion> 3 mm regardless of Gleason) in the untreated lobe and the treated lobe will be measured and will be used to evaluate the oncological evolution at 48 months.
48 months
Gleason score
Time Frame: 24 months
Evolution of the Gleason score (appearance of Gleason ≥7) will be measured and will be used to evaluate the oncological evolution at 24 months.
24 months
Gleason score
Time Frame: 48 months
Evolution of the Gleason score (appearance of Gleason ≥7) will be measured and will be used to evaluate the oncological evolution at 48 months.
48 months
Appearance of another cancerous focus in the other half of the prostate
Time Frame: 24 months
Appearance of another cancerous focus in the other half of the prostate will be supervised and will be used to evaluate the oncological evolution at 24 months.
24 months
Appearance of another cancerous focus in the other half of the prostate
Time Frame: 48 months
Appearance of another cancerous focus in the other half of the prostate will be supervised and will be used to evaluate the oncological evolution at 48 months.
48 months
Appearance of metastases
Time Frame: 24 months
Appearance of metastases (lymph node or bone) will be supervised and will be used to evaluate the oncological evolution at 24 months.
24 months
Appearance of metastases
Time Frame: 48 months
Appearance of metastases (lymph node or bone) will be supervised and will be used to evaluate the oncological evolution at 48 months.
48 months
Appearance of an extra capsular extension
Time Frame: 24 months
Appearance of an extra capsular extension will be supervised and will be used to evaluate the oncological evolution at 24 months.
24 months
Appearance of an extra capsular extension
Time Frame: 48 months
Appearance of an extra capsular extension will be supervised and will be used to evaluate the oncological evolution at 48 months.
48 months
Recurrence free survival
Time Frame: 48 months
Prostate cancer specific survival at 48 months will be measured from the date of inclusion to the date of first metastasis , or the date of last new or point date to 48 months
48 months
Proportion of serious adverse effect
Time Frame: 48 months
comparison between the 2 groups of the proportion of serious adverse effect at 48 months
48 months
Quality of life score
Time Frame: over the 48 months
quality of life will be compared between the two groups and assessed using the QLQC30 questionnaire
over the 48 months
EPIC-26 score
Time Frame: over the 48 months
urinary function will be compared between the two groups and assessed using the EPIC-26 questionnaire.
over the 48 months
IPSS score
Time Frame: over the 48 months
urinary function will be compared between the two groups and assessed using the IPSS questionnaire.
over the 48 months
IIEF-5 score
Time Frame: over the 48 months
Sexual function will be compared between the two groups and assessed using the IIEF-5 questionnaire
over the 48 months
STAi-YB score
Time Frame: Over the 48 months
Anxiety will be compared between the two groups and assessed using the STAi-YB questionnaire
Over the 48 months

Collaborators and Investigators

This is where you will find people and organizations involved with this study.

Study record dates

These dates track the progress of study record and summary results submissions to ClinicalTrials.gov. Study records and reported results are reviewed by the National Library of Medicine (NLM) to make sure they meet specific quality control standards before being posted on the public website.

Study Major Dates

Study Start (Actual)

October 2, 2018

Primary Completion (Estimated)

October 2, 2025

Study Completion (Estimated)

October 2, 2026

Study Registration Dates

First Submitted

May 9, 2018

First Submitted That Met QC Criteria

May 9, 2018

First Posted (Actual)

May 21, 2018

Study Record Updates

Last Update Posted (Actual)

February 28, 2024

Last Update Submitted That Met QC Criteria

February 27, 2024

Last Verified

February 1, 2024

More Information

Terms related to this study

Drug and device information, study documents

Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated drug product

No

Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated device product

No

This information was retrieved directly from the website clinicaltrials.gov without any changes. If you have any requests to change, remove or update your study details, please contact register@clinicaltrials.gov. As soon as a change is implemented on clinicaltrials.gov, this will be updated automatically on our website as well.

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