Image credit: Jan Chlebik from the ICR
Advanced radiotherapy technology could safely deliver curative treatment for some prostate cancer patients in just one or two weeks, according to new research published today.
This is a significant reduction from the current standard of care, which is one to two months and the first time such a short time-frame of treatment has been investigated in a phase III trial.
Delivering higher doses with no worse side effects
In the PACE-B trial, published today in The Lancet Oncology, researchers at The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust and The Institute of Cancer Research, London, used ultra-hypofractionated stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) to deliver five higher doses of radiation to patients over one to two weeks.
Researchers found in the three months after treatment, side effects were no worse when compared with patients who had conventional therapy with more moderate doses over a much longer period of time.
They are still awaiting data on long-term side effects and overall efficacy, with the treatment technique currently only available in a trial setting in the UK.
Targeting tumours with greater accuracy
SBRT allows clinicians to target tumours to sub-millimetre precision. Greater accuracy reduces the chance of damaging surrounding healthy tissue, which can lead to urinary and rectal side effects such as more frequent or urgent urination and diarrhoea.
In the PACE-B study researchers wanted to understand whether they could safely increase the dose of this targeted radiation, and so reduce the number of treatments required, or if this carried a risk of worse toxicity.
When treating patients, clinicians have to consider whether the higher doses in a shorter time period is the best option; the potential side effects are a critical factor in making this decision.
Our wide-ranging programme of prostate cancer research has delivered new targeted cancer drugs, radiotherapy regimens, genetic discoveries and diagnostic blood tests. Together these have had huge benefits for patients – helping men to live longer, improving their quality of life and increasing cure rates.
A randomised control trial
847 patients with prostate cancer were randomised to two groups. 432 patients were allocated the current standard of care receiving moderate hypofractionation radiotherapy (CFMHRT) for either 39 doses over seven/eight weeks, or 20 doses over four weeks. 415 patients were allocated ultra-hypofractionated SBRT, receiving five doses of treatment over one or two weeks. For both groups of patients, 90 per cent of whom had intermediate risk prostate cancer, this was intended to be curative treatment with no further treatment planned.
Patients on the control arm were assessed every other week, and on the SBRT arms assessed after the final dose day, and weeks two, four, eight and twelve after the end of treatment. Researchers incorporated both assessments by clinicians and questionnaires completed by patients.
They found patients in both groups had similar levels of side effects over the three months after treatment. They also found side effects in both groups were less overall than had been previously published.
Reducing patient visits for radiotherapy
Chief Investigator Dr Nicholas van As, Consultant Clinical Oncologist at The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust, and Reader at the ICR, said:
“At The Royal Marsden and the ICR we are focused on developing smarter, better and kinder treatments for patients across the UK and internationally. Developments in radiotherapy such as SBRT mean we can target tumours much more effectively.
“It is reassuring to see from this trial that SBRT does not significantly impact patients’ quality of life in the short term, compared with the current standard of care. Using SBRT to deliver this treatment would mean that patients could be spared numerous visits to hospital, allowing them to get back to their lives sooner.”
Dr van As, who is also Medical Director at The Royal Marsden and leader of the Stereotactic and Precision Radiotherapy Team at the ICR, added:
“These results are promising, and for the first time show in a large patient group that giving five large doses of SBRT is safe in the short term. It is important to point out that we will not know for another few years about the long term side effects and outcomes of treatment, and that this treatment technique is still only available in a trial setting in the UK."
The ICR's Division of Radiotherapy and Imaging is investigating new imaging methods to diagnose cancer, and ways in which advances in technology and molecular biology can improve radiation treatment.
Changing clinical practice to benefit patients
Study author Dr Douglas Brand, Research Fellow in Clinical Oncology at ICR and The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust, said:
“The new results from our clinical trial have shown that a much shorter course of higher-dose radiotherapy does not increase short term side effects compared with the current standard of care.
“If the data on longer-term side effects and efficacy are also positive, we expect our trial could be practice-changing. This would enable us to deliver curative treatment over fewer days – meaning that men would get the same benefit from their radiotherapy while having to spend less time in hospital.”
Dr Brand presented the patient outcomes from PACE-B at today’s American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO) Annual Meeting.
Getting back to normal life after treatment
Alfred, 84, was diagnosed with prostate cancer in 2013 at The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust. He was able to go onto the PACE-B trial for his treatment, and was randomised into the group to receive SBRT.
Alfred says: “I only had to go into The Royal Marsden five times over two weeks to have my radiotherapy treatment with CyberKnife. I was made very comfortable and overall – and not something I’d usually associate with cancer treatment - it was a breeze. I didn’t have many symptoms afterwards and was able to get back to my life. In the six years since, I’ve not had to have any further treatment. The Royal Marsden was excellent – I really couldn’t have asked for more.”
Authors will follow up PACE-B with PACE-C, a study supported with additional funding from The Royal Marsden Cancer Charity. This will compare patients receiving SBRT and androgen deprivation therapy (ADT – an anti-hormone therapy), with ADT, Image-Guided and Intensity Modulated radiotherapy.
The PACE-B study was funded by Accuray, sponsored by The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust, co-ordinated by the Clinical Trials and Statistics Unit at the ICR and endorsed by Cancer Research UK.