A Phase 3 Trial of 2 Years of Androgen Suppression and Radiation Therapy With or Without Adjuvant Chemotherapy for High-Risk Prostate Cancer: Final Results of Radiation Therapy Oncology Group Phase 3 Randomized Trial NRG Oncology RTOG 9902

Seth A Rosenthal, Daniel Hunt, A Oliver Sartor, Kenneth J Pienta, Leonard Gomella, David Grignon, Raghu Rajan, Kevin J Kerlin, Christopher U Jones, Michael Dobelbower, William U Shipley, Kenneth Zeitzer, Daniel A Hamstra, Viroon Donavanik, Marvin Rotman, Alan C Hartford, Jeffrey Michalski, Michael Seider, Harold Kim, Deborah A Kuban, Jennifer Moughan, Howard Sandler, Seth A Rosenthal, Daniel Hunt, A Oliver Sartor, Kenneth J Pienta, Leonard Gomella, David Grignon, Raghu Rajan, Kevin J Kerlin, Christopher U Jones, Michael Dobelbower, William U Shipley, Kenneth Zeitzer, Daniel A Hamstra, Viroon Donavanik, Marvin Rotman, Alan C Hartford, Jeffrey Michalski, Michael Seider, Harold Kim, Deborah A Kuban, Jennifer Moughan, Howard Sandler

Abstract

Purpose: Long-term (LT) androgen suppression (AS) with radiation therapy (RT) is a standard treatment of high-risk, localized prostate cancer (PCa). Radiation Therapy Oncology Group 9902 was a randomized trial testing the hypothesis that adjuvant combination chemotherapy (CT) with paclitaxel, estramustine, and oral etoposide plus LT AS plus RT would improve overall survival (OS).

Methods and materials: Patients with high-risk PCa (prostate-specific antigen 20-100 ng/mL and Gleason score [GS] ≥ 7 or clinical stage ≥ T2 and GS ≥ 8) were randomized to RT and AS (AS + RT) alone or with adjuvant CT (AS + RT + CT). CT was given as four 21-day cycles, delivered beginning 28 days after 70.2 Gy of RT. AS was given as luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone for 24 months, beginning 2 months before RT plus an oral antiandrogen for 4 months before and during RT. The study was designed based on a 6% improvement in OS from 79% to 85% at 5 years, with 90% power and a 2-sided alpha of 0.05.

Results: A total of 397 patients (380 eligible) were randomized. The patients had high-risk PCa, 68% with GS 8 to 10 and 34% T3 to T4 tumors, and median prostate-specific antigen of 22.6 ng/mL. The median follow-up period was 9.2 years. The trial closed early because of excess thromboembolic toxicity in the CT arm. The 10-year results for all randomized patients revealed no significant difference between the AS + RT and AS + RT + CT arms in OS (65% vs 63%; P=.81), biochemical failure (58% vs 54%; P=.82), local progression (11% vs 7%; P=.09), distant metastases (16% vs 14%; P=.42), or disease-free survival (22% vs 26%; P=.61).

Conclusions: NRG Oncology RTOG 9902 showed no significant differences in OS, biochemical failure, local progression, distant metastases, or disease-free survival with the addition of adjuvant CT to LT AS + RT. The trial results provide valuable data regarding the natural history of high-risk PCa treated with LT AS + RT and have implications for the feasibility of clinical trial accrual and tolerability using CT for PCa.

Conflict of interest statement

Conflict of interest: Dr. Dobelbower reports reimbursed costs of per-capita patient enrollment and pathology reimbursement from RTOG. Dr. Shipley reports ownership of Pfizer stock. Dr. Hamstra reports personal fees from Varian, personal fees from Augmenix, personal fees from Medivation, personal fees from Myriad, grants from Novartis, outside the submitted work. Dr. Sandler reports personal fees from AstraZeneca, personal fees from Medivation, grants from Myriad, from Janssen, personal fees from Blue Earth Diagnostics, personal fees from Ferring, personal fees from Bayer, personal fees from eviti, outside the submitted work. Dr. Gomella reports personal fees from Janssen, personal fees from Astellas, personal fees from Bayer, personal fees from Dendreon, outside the submitted work.

Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Consort Diagram
Figure 2
Figure 2
RTOG 9902: Overall Survival by Treatment Arm: All Randomized patients (n=397)

Source: PubMed

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