Whole-Body Diffusion-Weighted Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) as a Response Biomarker for Metastatic...
Prostate Cancer MetastaticThe skeleton is the most frequent organ of distal metastases in prostate cancer, often representing the only site of metastatic disease. Still, assessment of response and progression to therapies in bone metastases remains a major unmet need, to aid treatment switch decisions, detecting primary/secondary resistance and to optimize drug development. The currently used standard imaging techniques, computed tomography (CT) and bone scintigraphy (BS), do not depict the true extent of bone metastases and are suboptimal in capturing biological changes occurring in response to treatment. This results in treatment switch decisions too often being based on PSA changes, which is neither a surrogate of survival, nor an optimal response biomarker.Diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) is a functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) technique that studies the movement of water molecules within a tissue and provides valuable information about the tissue microstructure and cellularity. Whole body MRI with DWI is highly accurate for bone metastases detection, outperforming the standard CT and BS and other imaging techniques when assessing bone metastases. The investigators hypothesise that DWI changes are a response biomarker in bone metastases from metastatic castration resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC); these DWI changes can be detected as early as after 4 weeks of systemic treatment.
Detection of Viable CTCs Using the EPIDROP Technology in Metastatic Prostate Cancer (EPIDROP)
Prostate CancerThe use of liquid biopsy could be the key for precision medicine. Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) are the most studied circulating biomarkers used to assess the metastatic process and they have shown their clinical validity and utility in cancer patients. However, their detection and capture are still a challenge as they are very rare in the bloodstream. In this clinical trial named "EPIDROP", the investigators will use an innovative device called EPIDROP (for EPIspot in a DROP) in metastatic prostate cancer. EPIDROP is a completely new technology answering to biological and clinical questions by proposing a procedure detecting the functional subset of prostatic CTCs at the single cell level. The investigators will stain cells in the sample for EpCAM, PSMA, CD45 before to encapsulate them one by one in microdroplets and measure the PSA secretion by only the viable CTCs. This study aims to demonstrate the non-inferiority of the EPIDROP compared to the CellSearch system.
Internal Carotid Artery Blood Flow in Robot-Assisted Laparoscopic Prostatectomy
Prostate CancerThe purpose of this study is to evaluate the change of the internal carotid artery blood flow according to the steep trendelenburg position and pneumoperitoneum in patients undergoing robot-assisted laparoscopic prostatectomy.
Health-related Quality of Life, Psychological Distress and Fatigue in Metastatic CRPC Patients Treated...
Castrate Resistant Prostate CancerBone MetastasesThe aim of the current prospective multicenter study is to evaluate cancer-specific and bone metastases related HR-QoL, psychological distress and fatigue in mCRPC patients before, during and after treatment with radium-223 in daily practice. Furthermore, the investigators aim to determine patient groups with identical health-related quality of life patterns over time, in order to identify variables related to health-related quality of life deterioration during the course of treatment, as patients with health-related quality of life deterioration may need specific attention to preserve health-related quality of life.
Detection Rate of Prostate Cancer in Men Undergoing MRI
Prostatic NeoplasmTo assess prostate cancer (PCa) detection rate in men undergoing magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) before planning prostate biopsy. Results will be stratified considering men with/without previous negative prostate biopsy. Secondary objective will be to compute the negative predictive value of MRI in subject with no lesion detected at imaging or no cancer confirmed at biopsy, considering a follow-up of at least 2 years.
A Single Patient Compassionate Use of MBM-02 (Tempol) for the Treatment of Prostate Cancer
Prostate CancerA single patient compassionate use clinical trial for the use of MBM-02 (TEMPOL) for the treatment of prostate cancer. The single patient will be exposed to orally administered TEMPOL for up to 12 months at a maximum total daily dose of 800mg.
Risk-adapted Strategy Including Magnetic Resonance Imaging and Prostate-specific Antigen Density...
Prostate CancerProstate AdenocarcinomaRecent guidelines now recommend multi parametric magnetic resonance imaging prior to biopsy for all men as an integral part of improved diagnosis of clinical significant prostate cancer. However, magnetic resonance imaging targeted biopsy is a strategy that focuses on maximizing detection of clinical significant prostate cancer, but this procedure has the disadvantage of leading to higher detection of clinically insignificant prostate cancers. One of the risk-stratifications developed to minimize the existing disadvantages and avoid unnecessary biopsy procedures is a strategy in which multi parametric magnetic resonance imaging and prostate-specific antigen density are used in combination. This is especially important in all patients with PI-RADS (Prostate Imaging Reporting and Data System) 3 lesions which are also interpreted as indeterminate mpMRI findings. Current guidelines suggest that biopsy may be omitted in some patient groups with PI-RADS 3 lesions in the risk-adapted strategy involving prostate-specific antigen density. The aim of this study was to evaluate the role of risk-adapted strategies involving prostate-specific antigen density in biopsy decision to avoid unnecessary biopsy vs the risk of missing clinical significant prostate cancer diagnosis in patients with PI-RADS 3 lesions.
18F-NaF-PET/MR vs 99mTc-MDP-SPECT/CT to Detect Bone Metastases in Prostate Cancer Patients.
Bone MetastasesProstate CancerThe number of metastases in a patient with primary or recurrent prostate cancer has major prognostic implication. The purpose is to compare, in a pilot study, the diagnostic performance of 18F-NaF-PET/MR with respect to the results of the scintigraphy 99mTc-MDP-SPECT/CT (routine exam) for determining the presence or absence of bone lesions in prostate cancer patient, with up to five metastases (oligo-bone metastatic) based on scintigraphy 99mTc-MDP-SPECT/CT. The gold standard will be a combination of clinical follow-up, additional imaging and biopsy, as indicated by the multidisciplinary discussion at the tumor board. The findings from whole-body 99mTc-MDP-SPECT/CT, 18F-NaF-PET/MR, and the combination of the 2 modalities will be categorized by 2 teams of 2 readers as benign or probably benign, equivocal, or malignant or probably malignant and compared with the results of follow-up for JAFROC and ROC analysis.
Evaluation of the Potential Association Between 5α-reductase Inhibitors Prescription and Occurrence...
Benign Prostate HyperplasiaThis is a multicenter, cohort study based on medico-administrative data from pathology laboratory registries and drug reimbursement files (CNAM-TS).
Feasibility Study for the Assessment of Sleep Quality in Men With Prostate Cancer Starting ADT
Prostatic NeoplasmsSleepThe feasibility of using the Apnea Risk Evaluating System (ARESTM) device to take longitudinal measures of sleep parameters in asymptomatic men with prostate cancer who are about to initiate androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) will be evaluated. Study participants will complete serial questionnaires relating to sleep quality, hot flashes, and quality of life.