PCa Commentary | Volume 122 – May 2018

Posted by Edward Weber | May 2018

New Guidance on the Management of PSA Rise in the Setting of Nonmetastatic Castration-Resistant Prostate Cancer (nmCRPC): A New Role for Apalutamide and Enzalutamide

At the 2018 Genitourinary Session of the American Association of Clinical Oncology, two presentations reported similar findings which offer management guidance for men whose PSAs are rising despite androgen suppression but have no objective evidence of metastatic spread. For men with metastases, Zytiga and Xtandi are commonly prescribed, but to date there have been no approved treatments for therapy at the nonmetastatic CRPC stage.

The Importance of PSA Doubling Time (PSADT) and Metastases-Free Survival (MFS)

There has been a steady effort to establish PSADT as an indicator of cancer aggressiveness and its relationship with the development of metastases. A classic contribution to this issue was made by Antonarakis, Eisenberger, et al.: “The natural history of metastatic progression in men with prostate-specific antigen recurrence after radical prostatectomy: long-term follow-up.”1 Their goal was to define clinical prognostic factors modifying metastatic risk. Their work involved men with biochemical failure after primary treatment, not men with CRPC.

Their findings validated the importance of PSADT as a surrogate of cancer aggressiveness and as a predictor of the duration of MFS, as defined in their study with technetium bone scans and CT scans. Although the development of newer imaging techniques is increasing the sensitivity for identifying metastases, MFS is a useful endpoint for evaluating therapy effectiveness. Based on the same data of the BJU study, a report by Schweizer, Antonarakis, Eisenberger et al. established MFS as a surrogate for overall survival.2 This association has been supported by other researchers.

Briefly, in the BJU report the researchers found that a clinically meaningful stratification resulted by subgrouping PSADTs into four subcategories: <3.0 vs. 3-9 vs. 9-15 vs. >15.0 months. The following figures for MFS are taken from the graph, Fig.3, and are offered only as a representation of the strong influence of PSADT on median time to metastases: i.e., 1 month; 4, 9, and 15 months, respectively for the above subgroups.1  

These studies provide support for the use of PSADT in both of the ASCO 2018 studies evaluating the effect of the addition of apalutamide or enzalutamide (with continued ADT) on duration of MFS.  Each stratified their observations into two categories: PSADT less than 6 months vs. 6-10 months. 

For reference: This is the link to the Memorial Sloan Kettering calculator for PSADT: https://www.mskcc.org/nomograms/prostate/psa_doubling_time 

Background: 

Both apalutamide and enzalutamide are “antiandrogens” and are in the same category as bicalutamide (Casodex) but, compared to bicalutamide, both are 5-10 times more effective in blocking the access of testosterone and dihydrotestosterone to their requisite binding site on the androgen receptor. Apalutamide and enzalutamide are structurally very similar.  Apalutamide compared to enzalutamide displays less brain penetration and may be associated with a lower incidence of seizures, already a very uncommon adverse effect of enzalutamide. 

Of note: Abiraterone has not been FDA approved for use in men prior to the diagnosis of metastases. However, in a subgroup (28% of 1917 men) of the STAMPEDE trial3 men with high-risk cancer beginning androgen suppression were treated with either abiraterone/pred + ADT vs. ADT alone. At 4 years follow-up, 90% of men on combination therapy were failure-free compared to 60%. These findings suggest that this combination therapy is also more effective in improving failure-free survival even when employed at an early, hormone sensitive stage of the disease. (The high-risk men in following studies were already castration-resistant.)

The Two Trials Reported at ASCO GU 2018:

A similar message is clear in both reports:

In men with nonmetastatic CRPC whose PSA doubles in less than 6 months, treatment with either apalutamide or enzalutamide added to the continuation of androgen suppression delayed the development of metastases compared to only continuing ADT, i.e. Lupron, Firmagon, or castration. Although the data needs to mature, it appears that survival is also prolonged. 

 

  • SPARTAN Trial: “A phase 3 double-blind, randomized study of apalutamide (APA) versus placebo (PBO) in patients with nonmetastatic castration-resistance prostate cancer,” Small et al.4 

 

Eligibility for this trial of 1207 men required a “rising PSA despite castration-resistant testosterone (testosterone <=50 ng/dL) and PSADT <=10 months. The primary end point was MFS, defined as the time from randomization to first radiographic distant metastasis or death.”4 ADT was continued in both groups.

Findings: The median PSADT was < 5 months in both groups.        

  • “Apalutamide decreased the risk of distant metastases or death by 72% with a median MFS of 40.5 mo (combination) vs. 16.2 mo for those men continuing on ADT (plus placebo) alone. (“The benefit was seen in all subgroup analysis except black men,” Eric Small).
  • Time to PSA progression (at median follow-up of 20.3 months): not reached (combo) vs. 3.7 months (ADT alone)
  • The majority of men failing treatment in both arms were offered abiraterone through the trial.
  • Overall Survival (interim analysis): For the combination OS not reached (but a ~30% reduction suggested) compared to placebo, 39 months. 
  • “Adverse events were slightly higher in the apalutamide arm … serious adverse events (25% vs. 23%).”

 

  • PROSPER Trial: “A phase 3, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study of enzalutamide in men with nonmetastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer,” Hussain, et al.5

 

Eligibility in this 1401 man trial required nonmetastatic CRPC with a PSADT of < 10 months and a PSA > 2 ng/mL. The primary endpoint was MFS.

Findings: The median PSADT was < 4 months in both groups.           

  • Enzalutamide added to ADT significantly prolonged MFS to a median of 36.6 months vs. 14.7 for men continuing on ADT alone, representing a 71% reduction in the risk of developing metastases.
  • Time to PSA progression: 37.2 months (combo) vs. 3.9 months (ADT alone).
  • Overall survival (interim analysis): not reached but favoring enzalutamide arm by ~20%.
  • Serious adverse effects (24% vs. 18%) were more common in the combination therapy group.

Bottom Line:

As demonstrated in both the PROSPER and the SPARTAN trials, treatment with either apalutamide or enzalutamide, both with continued ADT, in men with nmCRPC delays the development of metastases compared to ADT alone. Enzalutamide has already received “priority review” for this indication by the FDA. When both are approved for use in the nmCRPC setting, these two regimens are likely to become the new standard of care for this phase of the disease.

References

  1. Antonarakis ES, Eisenberger MA, et al. The natural history of metastatic progression in men with prostate-specific antigen recurrence after radical prostatectomy: long-term follow-up. BJU Int. Jan 2012.
  2. Schweizer MT, Antonarakis ES, Eisenberger MA, et al. Metastasis-free survival is associated with overall survival in men with PSA-recurrent prostate cancer treated with deferred androgen deprivation therapy. Ann Oncol. 2013. 
  3. James ND, et al. Abiraterone for prostate cancer not previously treated with hormone therapy. NEJM. June 2017.
  4. Small EJ, et al. Apalutamide treatment and metastasis-free survival in prostate cancer. NEJM. Feb 2018.
  5. Hussain M, et al. PROSPER: A phase 3, randomized, double-blind, placebo (PBO)-controlled study of enzalutamide (ENZA) in men with nonmetastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (M0 CRPC). JCO. Feb 2018.

Your comments and requests for information on a specific topic are welcome e-mail ecweber@nwlink.com.   Please also visit https://prostatecancerfree.org/prostate-cancer-news for a selection of past issues of the PCa Commentary covering a variety of topics.

“I want to thank Dawn Scott, Staffperson, Tumor Institute Radiation Oncology Group, & Mike Scully, Librarian, Swedish Medical Center for their unfailing, timely, and resourceful support of the Commentary project. Without their help this Commentary would not be possible.”

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Edward Weber, MD, is a retired medical oncologist living in Seattle, Washington. He was born and raised in a suburb of Reading, Pennsylvania. After graduating from Princeton University in 1956 with a BA in History, Dr. Weber attended medical school at the University of Pennsylvania. His internship training took place at the University of Vermont in Burlington.

A tour of service as a Naval Flight Surgeon positioned him on Whidbey Island, Washington, and this introduction to the Pacific Northwest ultimately proved irresistible. Following naval service, he received postgraduate training in internal medicine in Philadelphia at the Pennsylvania Hospital and then pursued a fellowship in hematology and oncology at the University of Washington.

His career in medical oncology was at the Tumor Institute of the Swedish Hospital in Seattle where his practice focused largely on the treatment of patients experiencing lung, breast, colon, and genitourinary cancer and malignant lymphoma.

Toward the end of his career, he developed a particular concentration on the treatment of prostate cancer. Since retirement in 2002, he has authored the PCa Commentary, published by the Prostate Cancer Treatment Research Foundation, an analysis of new developments in the prostate cancer field with essays discussing and evaluating treatment management options in this disease. He is a regular speaker at various prostate cancer support groups around Seattle.