Authors
Robert Newton, Edith Cowan UniversityFollow
Stacey A Kenfield
Nicolas H. Hart, Edith Cowan UniversityFollow
June M Chan
Kerry S. Courneya, Edith Cowan UniversityFollow
James Catto
Stephen P Finn
Rosemary Greenwood
Daniel C Hughes
Lorelei Mucci
Stephen R Plymate
Stephan F E Praet
Emer M Guinan
Erin L Van Blarigan
Orla Casey
Mark Buzza
Sam Gledhill
Li Zhang
Daniel A. Galvao, Edith Cowan UniversityFollow
Charles J Ryan
Fred Saad
Document Type
Journal Article
Publication Title
BMJ Open
ISSN
2044-6055
Volume
8
Issue
5
First Page
022899
Last Page
022899
PubMed ID
29764892
Publisher
BMJ Publishing Group
School
School of Medical and Health Sciences
RAS ID
26661
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Preliminary evidence supports the beneficial role of physical activity on prostate cancer outcomes. This phase III randomised controlled trial (RCT) is designed to determine if supervised high-intensity aerobic and resistance exercise increases overall survival (OS) in patients with metastatic castrate-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC).
METHODS AND ANALYSIS: Participants (n=866) must have histologically documented metastatic prostate cancer with evidence of progressive disease on androgen deprivation therapy (defined as mCRPC). Patients can be treatment-naïve for mCRPC or on first-line androgen receptor-targeted therapy for mCRPC (ie, abiraterone or enzalutamide) without evidence of progression at enrolment, and with no prior chemotherapy for mCRPC. Patients will receive psychosocial support and will be randomly assigned (1:1) to either supervised exercise (high-intensity aerobic and resistance training) or self-directed exercise (provision of guidelines), stratified by treatment status and site. Exercise prescriptions will be tailored to each participant's fitness and morbidities. The primary endpoint is OS. Secondary endpoints include time to disease progression, occurrence of a skeletal-related event or progression of pain, and degree of pain, opiate use, physical and emotional quality of life, and changes in metabolic biomarkers. An assessment of whether immune function, inflammation, dysregulation of insulin and energy metabolism, and androgen biomarkers are associated with OS will be performed, and whether they mediate the primary association between exercise and OS will also be investigated. This study will also establish a biobank for future biomarker discovery or validation.
ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: Validation of exercise as medicine and its mechanisms of action will create evidence to change clinical practice. Accordingly, outcomes of this RCT will be published in international, peer-reviewed journals, and presented at national and international conferences. Ethics approval was first obtained at Edith Cowan University (ID: 13236 NEWTON), with a further 10 investigator sites since receiving ethics approval, prior to activation.
TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT02730338.
DOI
10.1136/bmjopen-2018-022899
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
Comments
Newton, R. U., Kenfield, S. A., Hart, N. H., Chan, J. M., Courneya, K. S., Catto, J., ... & Plymate, S. R. (2018). Intense Exercise for Survival among Men with Metastatic Castrate-Resistant Prostate Cancer (INTERVAL-GAP4): a multicentre, randomised, controlled phase III study protocol. BMJ open, 8(5), e022899. Available here