AI Article Synopsis

  • The study evaluates the effectiveness of irreversible electroporation (IRE) in treating intermediate-risk prostate cancer while minimizing damage to surrounding tissues compared to conventional treatments like robot-assisted radical prostatectomy and radiotherapy.
  • It involves two randomized controlled trials focusing on functional outcomes: urinary incontinence and irritative urinary symptoms, to provide evidence of IRE's lower impact.
  • The research aims to enroll 184 men with specific eligibility criteria to establish a foundation for future multicenter studies targeting oncological outcomes.

Article Abstract

The aim of focal treatments (FTs) in prostate cancer (PCa) is to treat lesions while preserving surrounding benign tissue and anatomic structures. Irreversible electroporation (IRE) is a nonthermal technique that uses high-voltage electric pulses to increase membrane permeability and induce membrane disruption in cells, which potentially causes less damage to the surrounding tissue in comparison to other ablative techniques. We summarize the study protocol for the Prostate Cancer IRE Study (PRIS), which involves two parallel randomized controlled trials comparing IRE with (1) robot-assisted radical prostatectomy (RARP) or (2) radiotherapy in men with newly diagnosed intermediate-risk PCa (NCT05513443). To reduce the number of patients for inclusion and the study duration, the primary outcomes are functional outcomes: urinary incontinence in study 1 and irritative urinary symptoms in study 2. Providing evidence of the lower impact of IRE on functional outcomes will lay a foundation for the design of future multicenter studies with an oncological outcome as the primary endpoint. Erectile function, quality of life, treatment failure, adverse events, and cost effectiveness will be evaluated as secondary objectives. Patients diagnosed with Gleason score 3 + 4 or 4 + 3 PCa from a single lesion visible on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) without any Gleason grade 4 or higher in systematic biopsies outside of the target (unifocal significant disease), aged ≥40 yr, with no established extraprostatic extension on multiparametric MRI, a lesion volume of <1.5 cm, prostate-specific antigen <20 ng/ml, and stage ≤T2b are eligible for inclusion. The study plan is to recruit 184 men.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10114162PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.euros.2023.03.003DOI Listing

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