Endocrine treatment, with or without radiotherapy, in locally advanced prostate cancer (SPCG-7/SFUO-3): an open randomised phase III trial
- PMID: 19091394
- DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(08)61815-2
Endocrine treatment, with or without radiotherapy, in locally advanced prostate cancer (SPCG-7/SFUO-3): an open randomised phase III trial
Erratum in
- Lancet. 2009 Apr 4;373(9670):1174
Abstract
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 from 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-up 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% CI 4.9-19.1%), for a relative risk of 0.44 (0.30-0.66). At 10 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.
Comment in
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Radiotherapy in locally advanced prostate cancer.Lancet. 2009 Jan 24;373(9660):274-6. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(08)61816-4. Epub 2008 Dec 16. Lancet. 2009. PMID: 19091392 No abstract available.
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Prostate cancer: local control and radiotherapy matter in prostate cancer.Nat Rev Urol. 2009 May;6(5):250-1. doi: 10.1038/nrurol.2009.56. Nat Rev Urol. 2009. PMID: 19424171
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ACP Journal Club. Adding radiotherapy to endocrine therapy improved survival in locally advanced prostate cancer.Ann Intern Med. 2009 Jun 16;150(12):JC6-6. doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-150-12-200906160-02006. Ann Intern Med. 2009. PMID: 19528551 No abstract available.
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Words of wisdom. Re: Endocrine treatment, with or without radiotherapy, in locally advanced prostate cancer (SPCG-7/SFUO-3): an open randomised phase III trial.Eur Urol. 2009 May;55(5):1240. doi: 10.1016/j.eururo.2009.01.059. Eur Urol. 2009. PMID: 19650206 No abstract available.
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Words of wisdom. Re: Endocrine treatment, with or without radiotherapy, in locally advanced prostate cancer (SPCG-7/SFUO-3): an open randomised phase III trial.Eur Urol. 2009 May;55(5):1239-40. doi: 10.1016/j.eururo.2009.01.058. Eur Urol. 2009. PMID: 19650231 No abstract available.
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