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Randomized Controlled Trial
. 2017 Mar 1;97(3):511-515.
doi: 10.1016/j.ijrobp.2016.11.002. Epub 2016 Nov 8.

Effect of Long-Term Hormonal Therapy (vs Short-Term Hormonal Therapy): A Secondary Analysis of Intermediate-Risk Prostate Cancer Patients Treated on NRG Oncology RTOG 9202

Affiliations
Randomized Controlled Trial

Effect of Long-Term Hormonal Therapy (vs Short-Term Hormonal Therapy): A Secondary Analysis of Intermediate-Risk Prostate Cancer Patients Treated on NRG Oncology RTOG 9202

Amin J Mirhadi et al. Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys. .

Abstract

Purpose: NRG Oncology RTOG 9202 was a randomized trial testing long-term adjuvant androgen deprivation (LTAD) versus initial androgen deprivation only (STAD) with external beam radiation therapy (RT) in mostly high-risk and some intermediate-risk prostate cancer patients. RTOG 9408 found an overall survival (OS) advantage in patients with cT1b-T2b disease and prostate-specific antigen (PSA) <20 ng/mL, with benefit observed mostly among intermediate-risk patients. It was still unknown whether intermediate-risk patients would experience an additional survival benefit with LTAD; thus, we performed a secondary analysis to explore whether LTAD had any incremental benefit beyond STAD among the intermediate-risk subset of RTOG 9202. The study endpoints were OS, disease-specific survival (DSS), and PSA failure (PSAF).

Methods and materials: An analysis was performed for all patients enrolled in RTOG 9202 defined as intermediate-risk (cT2 disease, PSA<10 ng/mL, and Gleason score = 7 or cT2 disease, PSA 10-20 ng/mL, and Gleason score <7). This review yielded 133 patients: 74 (STAD) and 59 (LTAD). The Kaplan-Meier method was used to estimate OS; the cumulative incidence approach was used to estimate DSS and PSAF. A 2-sided test was used, with significance level defined to be .05.

Results: With over 11 years of median follow-up, 39 STAD patients were alive and 33 LTAD patients were alive. There was no difference in OS (10-year estimates, 61% STAD vs 65% LTAD; P=.53), DSS (10-year DSS, 96% vs 97%; P=.72), or PSAF (10-year PSAF, 53% vs 55%; P=.99) between groups.

Conclusion: LTAD did not confer a benefit in terms of OS, DSS, or PSAF rates in the intermediate-risk subset in this study. Whereas the subset was relatively small, treatment assignment was randomly applied, and a trend in favor of LTAD would have been of interest. Given the small number of disease-specific deaths observed and lack of benefit with respect to our endpoints, this secondary analysis does not suggest that exploration of longer hormonal therapy is worth testing in the intermediate-risk prostate cancer subset.

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Conflict of interest statement

Conflict of interest: Dr Sandler reports grants from NRG Oncology during the conduct of the study; consulting/advisory fees from Janssen, Medivation, Ferring, NANT Health, and Clovis Oncology, outside the submitted work. The other authors report no conflict of interest.

Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Kaplan-Meier curve for overall survival between initial androgen deprivation only (STAD) and long-term adjuvant androgen deprivation (LTAD) for intermediate-risk patient subset.
Fig. 2
Fig. 2
Cumulative incidence curve for disease-specific survival between initial androgen deprivation only (STAD) and long-term adjuvant androgen deprivation (LTAD) for intermediate-risk patient subset.
Fig. 3
Fig. 3
Cumulative incidence curve for PSA failure between initial androgen deprivation only (STAD) and long-term adjuvant androgen deprivation (LTAD) for intermediate-risk patient subset.

Comment in

References

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