This phase II trial studies the side effects and how well alternating therapy between high dose testosterone and darolutamide works in treating patients who have not yet received treatment for prostate cancer that has spread from where it first started (primary site) to other places in the body (metastatic). Patients who develop metastatic prostate cancer are treated with medications that block testosterone effects (androgen deprivation therapy [ADT]) as first-line therapy. Eventually, the testosterone blocking therapies become ineffective and the tumor cells become resistant to the ADT causing the tumor to grow. Researchers think that cycling between high dose testosterone, which produces high levels of testosterone in the blood, followed by darolutamide, which blocks effects of testosterone within the prostate cancer cells and lowers testosterone in the blood, may help prevent these resistant prostate cancer cells from developing. Alternating therapy between high dose testosterone followed by darolutamide may be safer, more tolerable, and/ or more effective in treating patients who have not yet received treatment for metastatic prostate cancer.
Study sponsor and potential other locations can be found on ClinicalTrials.gov for NCT07142551.
Locations matching your search criteria
United States
Maryland
Baltimore
Johns Hopkins University/Sidney Kimmel Cancer CenterStatus: Active
Contact: Samuel Ray Denmeade
Phone: 410-502-8341
PRIMARY OBJECTIVE:
I. Percent of subjects that are free of clinical or radiographic progression at 24 months from initiation of treatment.
SECONDARY OBJECTIVES:
I. Percent of patients who achieve a complete prostate specific antigen (PSA) response (i.e. serum PSA < 0.2 ng/ml) at end of in lead-in phase.
II. Percent of patients who achieve a complete PSA response (i.e. serum PSA < 0.2 ng/ml) over the course of treatment with darolutamide.
III. Clinical or radiographic progression free survival.
IV. Overall survival.
V. Objective response to darolutamide following bipolar androgen therapy (BAT).
VI. Response in patients with high volume (Chemohormonal Therapy Versus Androgen Ablation Randomized Trial for Extensive Disease in Prostate Cancer [CHAARTED] criteria) versus (vs.) low volume disease.
VII. Investigate the safety of alternating parenteral testosterone and darolutamide therapy in men with recurrent or newly metastatic prostate cancer.
VIII. Quality of life through the RAND Health 36 Item Short Form (RAND-SF36) Quality of Life Survey, the Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy (FACIT)-Fatigue, and the International Index of Erectile Function (IIEF).
EXPLORATORY OBJECTIVES:
I. Radiographic progression free survival based on a binary cut-off threshold for the PSA peak achieved after the first BAT cycle determined by a survival tree method.
II. Prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA)-scan based response to lead-in phase of therapy.
III. Testosterone recovery kinetics after BAT during darolutamide therapy.
OUTLINE:
LEAD-IN PHASE: Patients receive ADT via leutenizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) agonist or antagonist and darolutamide orally (PO) twice daily (BID) for 24 weeks in the absence of disease progression or unacceptable toxicity. After 24 weeks, patients who have clinical or radiographic progression or do not have at least a ≥ 50% decline in PSA discontinue study and patients with ≥ 50% decline in PSA move to rapid cycling phase.
RAPID CYCLING PHASE: Patients receive alternating cycles of BAT and darolutamide. BAT cycles consist of testosterone cypionate intramuscularly (IM) once every 4 weeks (Q4W) for a total of 3 injections over 12 weeks. Darolutamide cycles consist of darolutamide PO BID over 12 weeks. Alternating cycles repeat every 84 days in the absence of disease progression or unacceptable toxicity.
Additionally, patients undergo computed tomography (CT), bone scan, and blood sample collection throughout the study. Patients may also undergo PSMA positron emission tomography (PET)/CT on study and/or tumor biopsy throughout the study.
After completion of study treatment, patients are followed up every 6 months for 3 years.
Lead OrganizationJohns Hopkins University/Sidney Kimmel Cancer Center
Principal InvestigatorSamuel Ray Denmeade