Image

Advanced Radiotherapy (ART) in Prostate Cancer (PROST-ART)

Advanced Radiotherapy (ART) in Prostate Cancer (PROST-ART)

Recruiting
18-95 years
Male
Phase N/A

Powered by AI

Overview

This is a retrospective monoinstitutional study which analyses the results of advanced radiotherapy (IGRT, IMRT, SBRT, and PET-guided) performed for radical, adjuvant, or salvage purposes in patients with low, intermediate, high, and very high-risk prostate cancer, or with biochemical, lymph node, or oligometastatic recurrence treated between 2004 and 2024.

Approved by Ethics Committee of IRCCS San Raffaele Hospital Approval Number: 187/INT/2021, 03/02/2022

Amendment approved by Ethics Committee 1, Lombardy Region Approval number CET Em. 194-2024, 22/05/2024

Description

This is a single-center, retrospective study (PROST-ART) that has as its primary objective the evaluation of the efficacy of radiotherapy treatments performed in patients with early-stage, advanced, metastatic prostate disease, with biochemical relapses after surgery, with local relapses after radiotherapy, or oligometastatic/oligoprogressive disease. The aim of the study is to measure the biochemical relapse-free survival (bRFS), local and regional relapse (LR, regional relapse, RR), distant metastases-free survival (DMS), clinical relapse (DFS), disease-free survival (PCSS), and overall survival (OS) from both disease diagnosis and the end of radiotherapy until the last useful follow-up, or until the patient's death. In addition, the acute and late toxicity of treatments will be assessed from the start of treatment until the last follow-up/death of the patient and the period without other oncological treatments, from the end of treatment until the start of another oncological treatment/last follow-up.

At least 200 patients treated in the last 5 years, some receiving stereotactic radiotherapy to the prostate, or prostate and seminal vesicles, and the others pelvic lymph node and prostate irradiation, who are still alive and contactable, and agree to participate, will be included in a survey on quality of life (QoL). These patients, after signing an informed consent for the collection of new information, will receive an EORTC QLQ-PR25 quality of life questionnaire, in order to quantify the impact of toxicity. In addition, the radiomic characteristics of the computed tomography/ PET-CT performed for treatment planning along with evaluation of the results will be extracted to identify related predictive factors.

The QoL study is configured as retrospective as the questionnaire will only be an expression, from the patient's point of view, of the toxicity of the previous treatment.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Prostate cancer patients, > 18 years old, treated with IGRT, IMRT, SBRT

Exclusion Criteria:

  • other tumors
  • > 95 years old

Study details
    Prostate Cancer

NCT06546267

IRCCS San Raffaele

15 October 2025

Step 1 Get in touch with the nearest study center
We have submitted the contact information you provided to the research team at {{SITE_NAME}}. A copy of the message has been sent to your email for your records.
Would you like to be notified about other trials? Sign up for Patient Notification Services.
Sign up

Send a message

Enter your contact details to connect with study team

Investigator Avatar

Primary Contact

  Other languages supported:

First name*
Last name*
Email*
Phone number*
Other language

FAQs

Learn more about clinical trials

What is a clinical trial?

A clinical trial is a study designed to test specific interventions or treatments' effectiveness and safety, paving the way for new, innovative healthcare solutions.

Why should I take part in a clinical trial?

Participating in a clinical trial provides early access to potentially effective treatments and directly contributes to the healthcare advancements that benefit us all.

How long does a clinical trial take place?

The duration of clinical trials varies. Some trials last weeks, some years, depending on the phase and intention of the trial.

Do I get compensated for taking part in clinical trials?

Compensation varies per trial. Some offer payment or reimbursement for time and travel, while others may not.

How safe are clinical trials?

Clinical trials follow strict ethical guidelines and protocols to safeguard participants' health. They are closely monitored and safety reviewed regularly.
Add a private note
  • abc Select a piece of text.
  • Add notes visible only to you.
  • Send it to people through a passcode protected link.