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Impact of Atorvastatin on Prostate Cancer Progression During ADT

Impact of Atorvastatin on Prostate Cancer Progression During ADT

Recruiting
18 years and older
Male
Phase 3

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Overview

This randomized double-blind placebo-controlled trial tests whether intervention with atorvastatin delays development of castration resistance compared to placebo during androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) for prostate cancer.

Description

Cholesterol-lowering statin drugs have been reported to lower proliferation activity in prostate cancer, delay occurrence of castration resistance and reduce the risk of prostate cancer death. Therefore, it is important to test statins' efficacy in addition to conventional prostate cancer treatment in a randomized, placebo-controlled trial.

This phase 3 randomized double-blind placebo-controlled trial will explore whether intervention with atorvastatin delays prostate cancer progression i.e. development of castration resistance compared to placebo during androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) for metastatic or recurrent prostate cancer.

Secondary objectives include exploring whether atorvastatin lowers prostate cancer-specific or overall mortality compared to placebo, and to demonstrate whether changes in serum lipid parameters predict disease recurrence and occurrence of adverse genomic changes predicting castration resistance among prostate cancer patients during ADT.

The study recruitment target is 400 participants who start ADT as management of metastatic or recurrent prostate cancer. These men will be randomized 1:1 (200 + 200) to receive blinded study drug, either 80 mg of atorvastatin daily or placebo until disease recurrence i.e. development of castration resistance or for a maximum of five years.

The study will be carried out in collaboration between urological departments of University Hospitals in Finland as a project of the national FinnProstata study group, Herlev University Hospital in Denmark, Vestfold and Telemark hospitals in Norway and the Tartu University Hospital in Estonia.

Follow-up is continued until the primary end-point, development of castration resistance. After this the participants will be given the opportunity to voluntarily carry on with the blinded intervention for maximum time of ten year to observe effects on survival after development of castration resistance. Blinding will be lifted after the follow-up is complete for all study participants.

Castration resistance is defined as prostate-specific antigen (PSA) progression (three consecutive rises of PSA measured at least 1 week apart with two > 50% increases over the nadir and PSA > 2 ng/ml) or radiological disease progression (appearance of two or more lesions in bone scan or soft tissue enlargement as per RECIST criteria) with serum testosterone at castrate level (< 1.73 nmol/l; 50 ng/dl) during ADT.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Histopathologically confirmed metastatic (radiologically confirmed bone or soft tissue metastasis or enlarged lymph nodes at minimum 15 mm in diameter beyond the pelvic lymph nodes) or recurrent (requiring treatment after curative-intent surgery or radiotherapy) adenocarcinoma of the prostate for which androgen deprivation or antiandrogen therapy (GnRH agonist/antagonist, bicalutamide/flutamide, surgical castration or enzalutamide/abiraterone monotherapy) is initiated as definitive treatment no longer than 3 months before recruitment
    • previous prostatectomy and radiation therapy allowed
    • ADT/antiandrogen therapy for neoadjuvant hormone therapy is not included
  • Willingness to participate and signing of informed consent

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Statin use at the time of recruitment or within 6 months of it
  • Previous adverse effects during statin therapy
  • Familial hypercholesterolemia or very high total cholesterol (9.3 mmol/l or above)
  • Clinically significant renal insufficiency (serum creatinine above 170 µmol/l) or liver insufficiency (serum alanine aminotransferase more than 2x above the upper limit of normal range)
  • Use of drugs that may interact with statins (St John's Wort, HIV protease inhibitors, ciclosporin, macrolide antibiotics, fucidic acid, phenytoin, carbamazepine, dronedarone or oral antifungal medication).

Study details
    Metastatic Prostate Cancer
    Recurrent Prostate Cancer

NCT04026230

Tampere University Hospital

26 January 2024

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