Title
Idronoxil Suppository Combine With Radiotherapy for Metastatic Prostate Cancer
Phase I Study of Idronoxil Combined With Radiation Treatment in Men With Metastatic Prostate Cancer
Phase
Phase 1Lead Sponsor
University of SydneyStudy Type
InterventionalStatus
TerminatedIndication/Condition
Metastatic Castrate- Resistant Prostate CancerIntervention/Treatment
phenoxodiol ...Study Participants
1The aim of the study is to determine the toxicity of Idronoxil (NOX66) when used in combination with palliative radiotherapy for metastatic prostate cancer
Who is it for? Patient may be eligible for this study if they have late stage metastatic prostate cancer which is castrate resistant and have metastatic lesions that are suitable for radiotherapy.
Study details There are two groups of patients in this study and no randomisation. The two groups will have two different doses of idronoxil (NOX66), representing a 2-step dose escalation. Both groups receive the same standard radiotherapy dose.
Group 1 will receive the lower dose (400 mg) of idronoxil suppository daily and Group 2 800 mg daily.
Recruitment into Group 2 will only commence once all Group 1 patients have completed the 13-day treatment course of idronoxil suppository without excessive unexpected toxicity. The total treatment duration will be 13-15 days for both groups depends on whether radiotherapy is given on consecutive days or over the weekend.
Day 0: commence idronoxil (NOX66) Days 1-5: 1 or 2 lesions will receive 20 Gy (radiotherapy dose unit) radiotherapy in 5 daily fractionated doses and continue daily NOX66 Day 6-12: Continue NOX66 (the duration of NOX66 will be 13-15 days depends on whether radiotherapy is given on consecutive days or over the weekend).
Both groups will have prostate-specific membrane antigen positron emission tomography (PSMA-PET) scans before starting treatment and three months after the last fraction of radiotherapy to assess treatment response.
Patients in Group 1 will be given 400mg of Idronoxil suppository (NOX66) (1 suppository) daily from Day 0(1 day before radiotherapy) until 7 days after radiotherapy. Group 2 will be given Idronoxil (NOX66) 800mg (2 suppositories) daily from Day 0 until 7 days after radiotherapy. All patients will receive one course of Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy (SBRT), to be delivered in 20 Gray in 5 fractions. Radiotherapy session will involve irradiation of 1-2 lesions. .
All patients (Group 1 and Group 2) will receive one course of Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy (SBRT), to be delivered in 20 Gray in 5 daily fractions on consecutive days. Radiotherapy session (week 1) will involve irradiation to 1-2 lesions.
Group 1 patients will receive 400mg of Idronoxil (NOX66) suppository (1 suppository) daily from Day 0 (1 day before radiotherapy) until 7 days after completion of radiotherapy. Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy will be given on Days1-5 (5 fractions). Total treatment course is 13-15 days, depends on whether radiotherapy is given on consecutive days or over the weekend.
Group 2 patients will receive 800mg of Idronoxil (NOX66) suppository (2 suppositories) daily from Day 0 (1 day before radiotherapy) until 7 days after completion of radiotherapy. Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy will be given on Days1-5 (5 fractions). Total treatment course is 13-15 days, depends on whether radiotherapy is given on consecutive days or over the weekend.
Inclusion Criteria: Confirmed metastatic prostate cancer that is castrate-resistant. 2-3 lesions suitable for radiotherapy. ECOG Performance status 0-2. Adequate bone marrow, hepatic and renal function At least 4 weeks must have elapsed prior to commencement of idronoxil treatment since prior chemotherapy, investigational drug or biologic therapy Exclusion Criteria: Chemotherapy regimens with delayed toxicity within the last 4 weeks. Any situation where the use of suppository therapy is contra-indicated or impractical(eg. chronic diarrhoea, colostomy, ulcerative colitis). No concurrent systemic chemotherapy or biologic therapy is allowed. Psychiatric disorder or social or geographic situation that would preclude study participation. Patient unable to provide consent