Copenhagen, Denmark
Onsite/Online

ESTRO 2022

Session Item

Saturday
May 07
10:30 - 11:30
Room D3
Late-breaking
Anna Kirby, United Kingdom;
Ben Slotman, The Netherlands
1220
Proffered Papers
Clinical
11:20 - 11:30
PROMPTS RCT of screening MRI for spinal cord compression in prostate cancer (ISRCTN74112318)
David Dearnaley, United Kingdom
OC-0105

Abstract

PROMPTS RCT of screening MRI for spinal cord compression in prostate cancer (ISRCTN74112318)
Authors:

David Dearnaley1, Vicki Hinder2, Adham Hijab3, Gail Horan4, Narayanan Srihari5, Philip Rich6, Graeme Houston7, Ann Henry8, Stephanie Gibbs9, Ram Venkitaraman10, Clare Cruickshank11, Shama Hassan2, Malcolm Mason12, Ian Pedley13, Heather Payne14, Susannah Brock15, Robert Wade16, Angus Robinson17, Omar Din18, Kathryn Lees19, Julia Murray20, Chris Parker21, Clare Griffin22, Aslam Sohaib (Senior Author)23, Emma Hall (Senior Author)24

1The Institute of Cancer Resarch and Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust , Division of Radiotherapy and Imaging, London, United Kingdom; 2The Institute of Cancer Research, Clinical Trials and Statistics Unit, London, United Kingdom; 3The Institute of Cancer Research and Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust, Division of Radiotherapy and Imaging, London, United Kingdom; 4The Queen Elizabeth Hospital King's Lynn NHS Foundation Trust UK, Clinical Oncology, King's Lynn,, United Kingdom; 5The Shrewsbury and Telford Hospital NHS Trust, Clinical Oncology, Shrewsbury , United Kingdom; 6St George’s University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Radiology, London, United Kingdom; 7University of Dundee and Tayside Health, Imaging Science and Technology,, Dundee, United Kingdom; 8University of Leeds, Clinical Oncology, Leeds, United Kingdom; 9Barking, Havering and Redbridge University Hospitals NHS Trust,, Clinical Oncology, London, United Kingdom; 10East Suffolk and North Essex NHS Foundation Trust, Clinical Oncology, Suffolk, United Kingdom; 11The Institute of Cancer Research,, Clinical Trials and Statistics Unit, London, United Kingdom; 12 Cardiff University, Clinical Oncology, Cardiff, United Kingdom; 13 The Newcastle upon Tyne Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Clinical Oncology, Newcastle, United Kingdom; 14University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Clinical Oncology, London, United Kingdom; 15University Hospitals Dorset NHS Foundation Trust, Clinical Oncology, Poole, United Kingdom; 16Norfolk and Norwich University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Clinical Oncology, Norwich, United Kingdom; 17 Brighton and Sussex University Hospitals NHS Trust,, Clinical Oncology, Brighton, United Kingdom; 18 Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Clinical Oncology, Sheffield, United Kingdom; 19Maidstone and Tunbridge Wells NHS Trust, Clinical Oncology, Maidstone, United Kingdom; 20 Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust and The Institute of Cancer Research , Clinical Oncology, London, United Kingdom; 21Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust and The Institute of Cancer Research, Clinical Oncology, London, United Kingdom; 22 The Institute of Cancer Research, Cliinical Trials and Statistics Unit, London, United Kingdom; 23Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust, Radiology, London, United Kingdom; 24 The Institute of Cancer Research, Clinical Trials and Statistics Unit, London, United Kingdom

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Purpose or Objective

Early diagnosis of malignant spinal cord compression (SCC) is crucial as pre-treatment neurologic status is the major determinant of outcome. In metastatic castrate resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) SCC is a significant cause of disease-related morbidity. In the PROMPTS trial we investigated whether screening for SCC with spinal MRI, with pre-emptive treatment if radiological SCC (rSCC) was detected, reduced the incidence of clinical SCC (cSCC) in asymptomatic mCRPC patients.

Material and Methods

PROMPTS is a phase III parallel-group, randomised controlled superiority trial.  CRPC patients aged at least 18 years with spinal metastases without related back pain or neurological symptoms, no previous SCC, and no spinal MRI in previous 12 months were eligible. Participants were randomly allocated (1:1 ratio) to control (no MRI) or screening spinal MRI. Allocation was not masked. A validated epidural spinal cord compromise scale (ESCC) was used. Pre-emptive treatment and 6-monthly spinal MRI were offered to patients with screen-detected rSCC. The primary endpoint was incidence of cSCC at 12 months.

Results

Between Feb 26, 2013 and April 25, 2017, we randomly assigned 420 men from 45 UK centres to control (n=210) or screening MRI (n=210).  Median age was 74 years (IQR:68-79), 53% (222/420) had normal alkaline phosphatase and median PSA was 48.0ng/ml (IQR:17-162). rSCC was detected at screening in 61/200 (30.5%) intervention group patients. Concordance of local and central assessments of rSCC was good (92.4%). At 12 months, the cumulative incidence of cSCC was 6.7% (95% CI 3.8-10.6) in the control group and 4.3% (2.1-7.7) in the intervention group (Gray's test p=0.119, HR:0.64 95%CI:0.37-1.11, Fig 1). In the intervention group cSCC developed more commonly in the rSCC +ve cases (11.5%) than the rSCC -ve cases (1.3%) and the rSCC-ve group had significantly less cSCC than the control group (Gray's test p=0.04, Fig2). Intervention for rSCC was with radiotherapy (RT) in 50/61 (82%) cases, only 4% progressed at the treated sites. RT was not given to 18 sites with  early rSCC (ESCC 1a-b,17: 1c, 1) but none progressed at 6 months. At the time of cSCC 70% of patients were ambulant and 18% of non-ambulant patients regained function post-RT. More spinal RT was given in the intervention than control group (86vs49 courses) but the use of additional systemic therapy was significantly less by 12 months (54%vs70%, Gray's test p=0.003).

Conclusion

We found no statistically significant differences in incidence of cSCC between the intervention and control groups. MRI screen-detected early rSCC lesions do not always progress to cSCC with contemporary systemic management of CRPC and observation may be reasonable for ESCC grade 1a/b lesions. However these patients remain at substantial risk of developing new sites of cSCC. Further efforts to better identify patients at high risk for rSCC and cSCC are warranted to refine selection of groups for screening spinal MR