The TROG 96.01 trial assessed whether 3-month and 6-month short-term neoadjuvant androgen
deprivation therapy (NADT) decreases clinical progression and mortality after radiotherapy
for locally advanced prostate cancer. Here we report the 10-year results.
Between June, 1996, and February, 2000, 818 men with T2b, T2c, T3, and T4 N0 M0 prostate
cancers were randomly assigned to receive radiotherapy alone, 3 months of NADT plus
radiotherapy, or 6 months of NADT plus radiotherapy. The radiotherapy dose for all
groups was 66 Gy, delivered to the prostate and seminal vesicles (excluding pelvic
nodes) in 33 fractions of 2 Gy per day (excluding weekends) over 6·5-7·0 weeks. NADT
consisted of 3·6 mg goserelin given subcutaneously every month and 250 mg flutamide
given orally three times a day. NADT began 2 months before radiotherapy for the 3-month
NADT group and 5 months before radiotherapy for the 6-month NADT group. Primary endpoints
were prostate-cancer-specific mortality and all-cause mortality. Treatment allocation
was open label and randomisation was done with a minimisation technique according
to age, clinical stage, tumour grade, and initial prostate-specific antigen concentration
(PSA). Analysis was by intention-to-treat. The trial has been closed to follow-up
and all main endpoint analyses are completed. The trial is registered with the Australian
New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry, number ACTRN12607000237482.
802 men were eligible for analysis (270 in the radiotherapy alone group, 265 in the
3-month NADT group, and 267 in the 6-month NADT group) after a median follow-up of
10·6 years (IQR 6·9-11·6). Compared with radiotherapy alone, 3 months of NADT decreased
the cumulative incidence of PSA progression (adjusted hazard ratio 0·72, 95% CI 0·57-0·90;
p=0·003) and local progression (0·49, 0·33-0·73; p=0·0005), and improved event-free
survival (0·63, 0·52-0·77; p<0·0001). 6 months of NADT further reduced PSA progression
(0·57, 0·46-0·72; p<0·0001) and local progression (0·45, 0·30-0·66; p=0·0001), and
led to a greater improvement in event-free survival (0·51, 0·42-0·61, p<0·0001), compared
with radiotherapy alone. 3-month NADT had no effect on distant progression (0·89,
0·60-1·31; p=0·550), prostate cancer-specific mortality (0·86, 0·60-1·23; p=0·398),
or all-cause mortality (0·84, 0·65-1·08; p=0·180), compared with radiotherapy alone.
By contrast, 6-month NADT decreased distant progression (0·49, 0·31-0·76; p=0·001),
prostate cancer-specific mortality (0·49, 0·32-0·74; p=0·0008), and all-cause mortality
(0·63, 0·48-0·83; p=0·0008), compared with radiotherapy alone. Treatment-related morbidity
was not increased with NADT within the first 5 years after randomisation.
6 months of neoadjuvant androgen deprivation combined radiotherapy is an effective
treatment option for locally advanced prostate cancer, particularly in men without
nodal metastases or pre-existing metabolic comorbidities that could be exacerbated
by prolonged androgen deprivation.
Australian Government National Health and Medical Research Council, Hunter Medical
Research Institute, AstraZeneca, and Schering-Plough.
Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.