Publications by authors named "Dearnaley D"

Article Synopsis
  • The study aimed to identify the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) for treating muscle invasive bladder cancer using image-guided adaptive radiation therapy while monitoring long-term clinical outcomes.
  • A total of 59 patients with specific stages of bladder cancer participated, with their tumors receiving doses ranging from 68 to 72 Gy, and the MTD was found to be 70 Gy.
  • Results showed that 5-year overall survival was 58%, and the bladder preservation rate was high at 89%, with minimal severe acute toxicities reported.
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Cancer evolution lays the groundwork for predictive oncology. Testing evolutionary metrics requires quantitative measurements in controlled clinical trials. We mapped genomic intratumor heterogeneity in locally advanced prostate cancer using 642 samples from 114 individuals enrolled in clinical trials with a 12-year median follow-up.

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Background: Moderately hypofractionated radiotherapy regimens or stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) are standard of care for localised prostate cancer. However, some patients are unable or unwilling to travel daily to the radiotherapy department and do not have access to, or are not candidates for, SBRT. For many years, The Royal Marsden Hospital NHS Foundation Trust has offered a weekly ultra-hypofractionated radiotherapy regimen to the prostate (36 Gy in 6 weekly fractions) to patients unable/unwilling to travel daily.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study aimed to assess how the prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels six months after radiotherapy affect the prognosis of patients treated with radiotherapy alone or along with short- or long-term androgen-deprivation therapy (ADT).
  • Data were collected from 16 clinical trials involving localized prostate cancer patients, analyzing their PSA levels and their association with metastasis-free survival (MFS), prostate cancer-specific mortality (PCSM), and overall survival (OS) twelve months post-treatment.
  • Results showed higher PSA levels (≥0.1 ng/mL) after treatment were linked to poorer MFS, OS, and higher PCSM rates across all treatment groups, indicating that PSA levels can help in making treatment decisions and designing future clinical trials
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Purpose: Despite major increases in the longevity of men with metastatic hormone-sensitive prostate cancer (mHSPC), most men still die of prostate cancer. Phase III trials assessing new therapies in mHSPC with overall survival (OS) as the primary end point will take approximately a decade to complete. We investigated whether radiographic progression-free survival (rPFS) and clinical PFS (cPFS) are valid surrogates for OS in men with mHSPC and could potentially be used to expedite future phase III clinical trials.

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Background: This study was designed to identify common genetic susceptibility and shared genetic variants associated with acute radiation-induced toxicity across 4 cancer types (prostate, head and neck, breast, and lung).

Methods: A genome-wide association study meta-analysis was performed using 19 cohorts totaling 12 042 patients. Acute standardized total average toxicity (STATacute) was modelled using a generalized linear regression model for additive effect of genetic variants, adjusted for demographic and clinical covariates (rSTATacute).

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates whether biochemical recurrence (BCR) can predict overall survival (OS) in localized prostate cancer by analyzing patient data from 11 clinical trials focused on various treatment methods.* -
  • Results showed that while treatment methods like short-term androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) improved cancer outcomes, there was no significant treatment impact on OS when adjusting for BCR after 48 months.* -
  • The correlation between BCR-free survival and OS was moderate, with Kendall's tau values demonstrating a range between 0.59 and 0.69, indicating a potential relationship but underscoring the complexity of predicting overall survival based on BCR.*
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Objectives: To compare the results of Gleason Grade Group (GGG) classification following central pathology review with previous local pathology assessment, and to examine the difference between using overall and worst GGG in a large patient cohort treated with radiotherapy and short-course hormone therapy.

Patients And Methods: Patients with low- to high-risk localized prostate cancer were randomized into the multicentre CHHiP fractionation trial between 2002 and 2011. Patients received short-course hormone therapy (≤6 month) and radical intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT).

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Purpose: Rectal dose delivered during prostate radiation therapy is associated with gastrointestinal toxicity. Treatment plans are commonly optimized using rectal dose-volume constraints, often whole-rectum relative-volumes (%). We investigated whether improved rectal contouring, use of absolute-volumes (cc), or rectal truncation might improve toxicity prediction.

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Background: Abiraterone acetate plus prednisolone (herein referred to as abiraterone) or enzalutamide added at the start of androgen deprivation therapy improves outcomes for patients with metastatic prostate cancer. Here, we aimed to evaluate long-term outcomes and test whether combining enzalutamide with abiraterone and androgen deprivation therapy improves survival.

Methods: We analysed two open-label, randomised, controlled, phase 3 trials of the STAMPEDE platform protocol, with no overlapping controls, conducted at 117 sites in the UK and Switzerland.

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Purpose: The CHHiP trial assessed moderately hypofractionated radiation therapy in localized prostate cancer. We utilized longitudinal prostate-specific antigen (PSA) measurements collected over time to evaluate and characterize patient prognosis.

Methods And Materials: We developed a clinical dynamic prediction joint model to predict the risk of biochemical or clinical recurrence.

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Background: Protein markers of cellular proliferation, hypoxia, apoptosis, cell cycle checkpoints, growth factor signalling and inflammation in localised prostate tumours have previously shown prognostic ability. A translational substudy within the CHHiP trial of radiotherapy fractionation evaluated whether these could improve prediction of prognosis and assist treatment stratification following either conventional or hypofractionated radiotherapy.

Methods: Using case:control methodology, patients with biochemical or clinical failure after radiotherapy (BCR) were matched to patients without recurrence according to established prognostic factors (Gleason score, presenting PSA, tumour-stage) and fractionation schedule.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study explores how the timing of androgen-deprivation therapy (ADT) relative to radiotherapy (RT) affects outcomes for prostate cancer, particularly comparing prostate-only RT (PORT) and whole-pelvis RT (WPRT).
  • Researchers analyzed data from 12 randomized trials involving 7,409 patients and utilized advanced statistical methods to assess the impact of ADT sequencing on metastasis-free survival and overall survival.
  • Findings indicated that for patients receiving PORT, concurrent/adjuvant ADT resulted in better metastasis-free survival and lower rates of prostate cancer-specific mortality, whereas WPRT showed no significant differences in outcomes based on ADT timing.
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Purpose: Our purpose was to report 5-year efficacy and toxicity of intraprostatic lesion boosting using standard and hypofractionated radiation therapy.

Methods And Materials: DELINEATE (ISRCTN 04483921) is a single center phase 2 multicohort study including standardly fractionated (cohort A: 74 Gy/37F to prostate and seminal vesicles [PSV]; cohort C 74 Gy/37F to PSV plus 60 Gy/37F to pelvic lymph nodes) and moderately hypofractionated (cohort B: 60 Gy/20F to PSV) prostate intensity-modulated radiation therapy patients with National Comprehensive Cancer Network intermediate/high-risk disease. Patients received an integrated boost of 82 Gy (cohorts A and C) or 67 Gy (cohort B) to multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging identified lesion(s).

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Purpose: Moderately hypofractionated external beam intensity modulated radiation therapy (RT) for prostate cancer is now standard-of-care. Normal tissue toxicity responses to fraction size alteration are nonlinear: the linear-quadratic model is a widely used framework accounting for this, through the α/β ratio. Few α/β ratio estimates exist for human late genitourinary endpoints; here we provide estimates derived from a hypofractionation trial.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study investigates the impact of local failure after radiotherapy in patients with intermediate- and high-risk prostate cancer, utilizing data from over 12,500 patients in various trials from 1985 to 2015.
  • - Local failure is linked to worse overall survival and prostate cancer-specific survival in high-risk patients, while intermediate-risk patients showed a strong connection between local failure and distant metastasis-free survival, but not overall survival.
  • - The research highlights that patients who experience local failure face a higher risk of progressing to prostate cancer-specific death, emphasizing the importance of monitoring local failure as part of patient prognosis.
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Background: STAMPEDE previously reported adding upfront docetaxel improved overall survival for prostate cancer patients starting long-term androgen deprivation therapy. We report long-term results for non-metastatic patients using, as primary outcome, metastatic progression-free survival (mPFS), an externally demonstrated surrogate for overall survival.

Methods: Standard of care (SOC) was androgen deprivation therapy with or without radical prostate radiotherapy.

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Background: STAMPEDE has previously reported that radiotherapy (RT) to the prostate improved overall survival (OS) for patients with newly diagnosed prostate cancer with low metastatic burden, but not those with high-burden disease. In this final analysis, we report long-term findings on the primary outcome measure of OS and on the secondary outcome measures of symptomatic local events, RT toxicity events, and quality of life (QoL).

Methods And Findings: Patients were randomised at secondary care sites in the United Kingdom and Switzerland between January 2013 and September 2016, with 1:1 stratified allocation: 1,029 to standard of care (SOC) and 1,032 to SOC+RT.

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Adding abiraterone acetate (AA) plus prednisolone (P) to standard of care (SOC) improves survival in newly diagnosed advanced prostate cancer (PC) patients starting hormone therapy. Our objective was to determine the value for money to the English National Health Service (NHS) of adding AAP to SOC. We used a decision analytic model to evaluate cost-effectiveness of providing AAP in the English NHS.

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Article Synopsis
  • A network meta-analysis was conducted using data from 13 randomized trials involving 11,862 prostate cancer patients to evaluate the effects of radiotherapy dose escalation combined with short-term or long-term androgen deprivation therapy (ADT).
  • The primary focus was on metastasis-free survival (MFS), with findings indicating that long-term ADT provided the most significant improvement in outcomes compared to RT dose escalation alone.
  • Ultimately, while RT dose escalation did not enhance MFS, adding STADT or LTADT consistently improved MFS, with high-dose RT combined with LTADT emerging as the most effective strategy for biochemical recurrence-free survival (BCRFS) and overall outcomes.
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Abiraterone acetate plus prednisolone (AAP) previously demonstrated improved survival in STAMPEDE, a multiarm, multistage platform trial in men starting long-term hormone therapy for prostate cancer. This long-term analysis in metastatic patients was planned for 3 years after the first results. Standard-of-care (SOC) was androgen deprivation therapy.

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Background: Early diagnosis of malignant spinal cord compression (SCC) is crucial because pretreatment neurological status is the major determinant of outcome. In metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer, SCC is a clinically significant cause of disease-related morbidity and mortality. We investigated whether screening for SCC with spinal MRI, and pre-emptive treatment if radiological SCC (rSCC) was detected, reduced the incidence of clinical SCC (cSCC) in asymptomatic patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer and spinal metastasis.

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