SNMMI 2019: Overview of the Treatment Landscape in Castration-Resistant Prostate Cancer

Las Vegas, Nevada (UroToday.com) Dr. Tanya Dorff gave an extensive overview highlighting the major changes and evolving areas in advanced prostate cancer management. Her talk focused on the non-metastatic castrate-resistant prostate cancer (m0CRPC), oligometastatic prostate cancer, and metastatic CRPC (mCRPC).

In the new space of m0CRPC, there has been recent level one evidence coming from three new treatments showing significant overall survival benefit.  These include apalutamide (SPARTAN trial1), enzalutamide (PROSPER trial2), and darolutamide (ARAMIS trial3), elegantly summarized in Table 1. However, this space is currently being investigated as new imaging modalities may obliterate this space due to increased specificity and sensitivity for the diagnosis of metastatic disease.

Table 1 – Novel treatment options for non-metastatic castrate-resistant prostate cancer:

SNMMI 2019 Novel treatment options for non metastatic CRPC

Moving on to metastatic hormone-sensitive prostate cancer (mHSPC), there are still many unanswered questions. Theses include whether the primary tumor needs to be treated in this setting. The STAMPEDE arm H trial4 identified a benefit for radiotherapy to the prostate in patients with low metastatic burden. There is currently an ongoing SWOG 1802 trial (NCT03678025) which randomizes mHSPC patients to standard systemic therapy with or without primary therapy to the prostate in the form of radical prostatectomy or radiotherapy.

Another unanswered issue is the whole concept of metastatic directed therapy (in the form of radiotherapy for example) for oligometastatic disease. It is still not clear if this concept has any benefit, and in what capacity. Lastly, we do not have enough data on whether continuous therapy is still necessary for these patients.

Dr. Dorff moved on to discuss the current treatment paradigm for mCRPC. For this disease space, there have been several treatment options available for some years now. These include:

  1. Abiraterone, both in the post-chemotherapy5 (overall survival benefit of 14.8 months vs. 10.9 months for placebo) and pre-chemotherapy6 setting (progression-free survival benefit of 16.5 months vs. 8.3 months)
  2. Cabazitaxel after therapy with docetaxel7 (overall survival benefit of 15.1 months vs. 12.7 months for mitoxantrone)
  3. Enzalutamide, both in the post-chemotherapy8 (overall survival benefit of 18.4 months vs. placebo 13.6 months) and pre-chemotherapy9 setting (overall survival benefit of 32.4 months vs. 30.2 months for placebo)
  4. Radium-223 – the ALSYMPCA trial10 showing an overall survival benefit of 14.9 months (placebo 11.3 months)
  5. Sipuleucel-T – showing and overall survival benefit of 23.2 months vs. 18.9 months for placebo in the IMPACT trial11
  6. Docetaxel showing an overall survival benefit of 18.9 months vs. 16.5 months in the mitoxantrone group in the landmark trial of TAX 32712

The current treatment paradigm for metastatic prostate cancer is summarized nicely in figure 1. The optimal sequence of treatments is not currently known, but there are several potential recommendations that can be followed (Figure 2). Whatever treatment is given first, there is evidence showing that the second treatment is always less effective, as seen in figure 3.

Figure 1 – The current treatment paradigm for metastatic prostate cancer:

SNMMI 2019 Figure1 treatment paradigm for metastatic PCa

Figure 2 – Treatment sequencing in metastatic prostate cancer – when to consider giving one treatment over the other:

SNMMI 2019 Figure2 Treatment sequencing in metastatic PCa

Figure 3 – Treatment sequencing is less effective (abiraterone after enzalutamide or enzalutamide after abiraterone):

SNMMI 2019 Figure3 less effective treatment sequencing

The molecular basis for progression on androgen-signaling targeted inhibitors (abiraterone and enzalutamide) is based on the presence of androgen receptor variant 7 (ARV7) – splice variant without ligand-binding domain. This variant confers resistance to both abiraterone and enzalutamide, but does not confer resistance to docetaxel, and perhaps to radium 223. Another reason for the progression might be treatment-emergent neuroendocrine prostate cancer (t-NEPC) which lacks androgen receptor signaling.

There are also some recommendations to help decide when to treat these metastatic prostate cancer patients with either radium 223 or chemotherapy, shown in figure 4. In general, chemotherapy is preferred when the ARV7 or other molecular markers are present. There is some evidence suggesting that when DNA repair mutations are present, this may predict response to radium-22313, while BRCA mutations may impact response to chemotherapy.14 

Figure 4 – How to choose between chemotherapy and radium-223?

SNMMI 2019 Figure 4 chemotherapy vs radium 223

There have been several studies assessing the combination of these treatments. In the A031201 trial, enzalutamide was given with and without abiraterone in patients with mCRPC.15 This study did not show any overall survival difference, but there was a higher rate of grade 3-5 adverse effects in the combination arm.

In the ERA 22316 and PEACE III17 trials, an excess of fractures was noted in the combination of abiraterone or enzalutamide with radium-223. However, adding bone protective agents eliminated the increased fracture risk that was seen in the PEACE III trial. It is unclear yet whether the advantage for abiraterone or enzalutamide with radium-223 exists.

There are still more questions than answers regarding the use of radium-223 (Table 2). It is unclear whether it kills prostate cancer cells, whether it activates the immune system or if it impacts bone health.

Table 2 - What don’t we know yet regarding radium-223?

SNMMI 2019 table2 questions regarding radium 223

Genomic testing is important and probably recommended in all men with metastatic prostate cancer. This is since a high response rate for the poly ADP ribose polymerase (PARP) inhibitor in men with DNA repair deficiency (BRCA 1 & 2, ATM, Fanconi, and CHEK2) is seen in patients with genomic abnormalities. In the recently presented TOPARP-B trial at ASCO 2019, Olaparib demonstrated antitumor activity against heavily pre-treated mCRPC patients with DNA damage repair (DDR) gene mutations, with BRCA1/2 aberrant tumors being the most sensitive, but with confirmed responses in patients with other DDR alterations.18 Aside from Olaparib, there are currently other agents in the pipeline (niraparib, rucaparib, talazoparib).

The PROFOUND trial is a phase 3 trial that aimed to evaluate Olaparib efficacy and safety versus physician’s choice of either abiraterone acetate or enzalutamide, in patients with mCRPC and a homologous recombination repair gene aberration.19 Initial results were recently presented at the ESMO 2019 meeting (Figure 5) showing a radiologic progression-free survival of 7.39 months in Olaparib treated patients compared to 3.55 months in the patients treated with other therapies.

Figure 5 – PROFOUND trial initial results:

SNMMI 2019 Figure 5 PROFOUND trial initial results

Immunotherapy is also being investigated in the mCRPC setting with the KEYNOTE -199 trial assessing pembrolizumab.20 This had led to the exploration of the idea of combining immunotherapy with radium-223, as can be seen in the trials described in Table 3. Another field that will be deeply explored in the next few years is the field of theranostics, which combines specific targeted therapy based on specific targeted diagnostic tests. The most studied of these compounds is the Lutetium-PSMA. The only ongoing phase three trial assessing this compound is the VISION trial21 (Figure 6).

Table 3 – Trials assessing the combination of Radium-223 + PARP inhibitors with immunotherapy:

SNMMI 2019 Table 3 combination of Radium 223 PARP

Figure 6 – VISION trial design:

SNMMI 2019 Figure 6 VISION trial design

Concluding her talk, Dr. Dorff reiterated that for the m0CRPC space – new advanced imaging may eventually close this space. Combination treatments are not yet helpful, but more studies are needed to explore these combinations. Radio-labeled compounds currently present the next big frontier in the field of metastatic prostate cancer, while immunotherapy is still being explored and optimized.

Presented by: Tanya Dorff, MD, Associate Clinical Professor, Genitourinary Cancer Program Head, Department of Medical Oncology & Therapeutics Research, City of Hope Cancer Center, Duarte, California  

 
References:
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