PMID-29752180 – LuPSMA Phase 2 Trial Lu-177-PSMA-617 in mCRPC

PMID-29752180 – LuPSMA Phase 2 Trial Lu-177-PSMA-617 in mCRPC

Hofman MS, Violet J, Hicks RJ, et al. [177Lu]-PSMA-617 radionuclide treatment in patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (LuPSMA trial): a single-centre, single-arm, phase 2 study. Lancet Oncol. 2018;19(6):825-833.

Quick Reference

Property Value
PMID 29752180
DOI 10.1016/S1470-2045(18)30198-0
Year 2018
Journal The Lancet Oncology
Study Type Observational (Phase 2, single-arm)
Evidence Level III
Sample 30 patients with mCRPC
Peptide(s) Studied Lutetium-177-PSMA-617

Key Findings

  • PSA decline >=50% achieved in 57% (17/30) of patients (95% CI 37-75%)
  • Objective response in measurable disease: 82% (14/17 evaluable patients)
  • No treatment-related deaths
  • Dry mouth was the most common AE (87%, all grade 1)
  • Grade 3-4 thrombocytopenia in 13% (4 patients)
  • 26 of 30 patients had received prior chemotherapy; 25/30 had prior abiraterone/enzalutamide
  • Median overall survival was 13.5 months from first cycle
  • Quality of life improved significantly from baseline

Study Design

Single-center, single-arm, Phase 2 study (NCT02683370) at Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, Melbourne, Australia. 30 eligible patients with progressive PSMA-positive mCRPC received up to 4 cycles of 177Lu-PSMA-617 (7.5 GBq IV) at 6-week intervals. Primary endpoint: PSA response (>=50% decline). PSMA positivity confirmed by 68Ga-PSMA PET/CT with SUVmax > 20.

Limitations

  • Single-arm design without comparator
  • Small sample size (n=30)
  • Single-center study, limiting generalizability
  • Strict PSMA-positivity criteria (SUVmax > 20) selected for high-PSMA expressors
  • Short follow-up period

Clinical Relevance

The LuPSMA trial was the first prospective clinical trial of 177Lu-PSMA-617, providing critical proof-of-concept data that justified the large Phase 3 VISION trial. The 57% PSA response rate and 82% objective response rate in a heavily pretreated population were remarkably high for late-line mCRPC therapy. This study established the feasibility and safety of PSMA-targeted radioligand therapy and launched a new therapeutic paradigm in prostate oncology.

Related

#research #observational #lutetium-177-PSMA-617 #evidence-level-III