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Cancer of the Prostate Treated With Focal Implantation of a RadioactivE Source
Sponsor: Herlev Hospital
Summary
The purpose is to assess and describe the oncological and functional outcomes following the introduction of curative targeted focal brachytherapy of prostate cancer in Denmark. Men with a single MRI-identifiable prostate cancer index-tumour who fulfil inclusion criteria and are candidates for curative treatment. Eligible men will undergo curative intended targeted focal brachytherapy for treatment of histologically confirmed prostate cancer. The intervention will include Low- (LDR) or High (HDR) dose rate targeted focal brachytherapy of prostate cancer. Collection of data on safety, morbidity, side effects and quality of life. Collection of clinical data on treatment efficacy, progression, and mortality. All patients will have a follow up of 10-years for oncological outcome, 5-years for acute- and late toxicity-, and 2-years for functional outcomes, respectively. The follow up will include clinical data, MRI, confirmatory biopsies, and questionnaires at specific fixed time points pre-and post-operatively after 1-3 days, 4-weeks, 3-, 6--, 9-, 12-, 18-, and 24-months followed by every 6 months up to 5-yr and then every year up to 10-yr follow-up. Anticipated number of patients is 50 and regular analysis and reporting will be performed continuously. The first short-term analysis will be after 18-months of follow-up after confirmatory MRI and biopsies, and the final reporting will be after 10-years follow-up in 2035.
Official title: Cancer of the Prostate Treated With Focal Implantation of a RadioactivE Source - The Introduction of Prostate Cancer Targeted Focal Therapy Treatment in Denmark
Key Details
Gender
MALE
Age Range
18 Years - 80 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
50
Start Date
2023-11-01
Completion Date
2037-06
Last Updated
2025-03-12
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Focal Brachytherapy
Targeted focal brachytherapy is an image-guided technique, where the radioactive source is placed only, and directly into the cancerous area of the prostate. The aim is to preserve the normal surrounding prostate gland tissue to limit treatment-related side effects to the adjacent anatomical structures. A multiparametric prostate MRI is used to identify, localize, and delineate the intraprostatic PCa tumour lesion and plan treatment. A specialized MRI-ultrasound image-fusion software combines the MRI-images with dynamic ultrasound performed in the operating room and is used to focally guide the placement of the radioactive source in the prostate cancer (PCa) tumour focus based on focal dosimetry calculations. A safety margin around the tumour is applied where it is possible to account for MRI tumour volume underestimation, microscopic spread, and treatment uncertainties.
Locations (1)
Department of Urology, Herlev University Hospital Herlev
Herlev, Denmark