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      Efficacy and toxicity according to hormone therapy used in the CHHiP trial.

      1 , 2 , 2 , 3 , on behalf of the CHHiP Investigators
      Journal of Clinical Oncology
      American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)

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          Abstract

          316

          Background: CHHiP (CRUK/06/016) is a multicentre randomised controlled trial which investigated the use of moderately hypofractionated radiotherapy (RT) dose schedules for treatment of localised prostate cancer. 97% of participants (pts) had concurrent androgen deprivation therapy (ADT). Luteinising Hormone Releasing Hormone analogues (LHRHa) and bicalutamide 150mg (BIC) daily were permitted. This exploratory analysis investigates whether both ADT regimens show similar efficacy and whether BIC has the propensity to preserve erectile function. Methods: In CHHiP, 2700 pts received LHRH and 403 BIC, median duration 5.6 months. The primary endpoint was biochemical or clinical failure (BCF). ADT groups were compared with Cox regression adjusted forage, NCCN risk group, Gleason score,T-stage and stratified by RT dose. A key secondary endpoint was erectile function assessed by clinicians (LENTSOM subjective erectile function for vaginal penetration score) and pts (single items within UCLA-PCI and EPIC-50 questionnaires) at 2 years. 195/875 (22%) pts were excluded from this toxicity analysis as they had erectile dysfunction pre-ADT (grade (G) 3/4 LENTSOM). A chi square trend test compared ADT regimens. Results: Baseline demographics were similar except BIC pts were significantly younger (median 67 years BIC, 69 years LHRHa). With a median follow-up of 9.2 years, there was no evidence of a difference in BCF with an adjusted hazard ratio 0.95 (95% CI 0.75-1.20), p = 0.657. Eight year BCF rates were 80.7% (95%CI 79.0-82.2) and 80.3% (95%CI 75.8-84.0) for LHRHa and BIC pts respectively. At two years, LENTSOM erectile function was significantly worse (p < 0.0001) for LHRHa pts with 93/585 (16%), 95/585 (16%) and 125/585 (21%) G2, G3 and G4, compared to 3/68 (4%), 5/68 (7%) and 9/68 (13%) in BIC. At 2 years, the ability to have an erection, as reported by pts, was graded poor and very poor in 73/278 (26%) and 57/278 (21%) LHRHa pts and 5/23 (22%) and 4/23 (17%) in BIC pts (p = 0.584). Conclusions: There was no evidence of a difference in efficacy according to ADT received. BIC preserved clinician assessed (LENTSOM) erectile function at 2 years but patient reported outcomes did not show statistically significant differences with type of ADT. Clinical trial information: 97182923.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Journal of Clinical Oncology
          JCO
          American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)
          0732-183X
          1527-7755
          February 20 2020
          February 20 2020
          : 38
          : 6_suppl
          : 316
          Affiliations
          [1 ]The Royal Marsden Hospital and The Institute of Cancer Research, London, United Kingdom;
          [2 ]The Institute of Cancer Research, London, United Kingdom;
          [3 ]Institute of Cancer Research and The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust, London, United Kingdom;
          Article
          10.1200/JCO.2020.38.6_suppl.316
          127632fb-71f1-42ce-a96c-f7782c2bf00d
          © 2020
          History

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