Highlights
- First systematic review of abiraterone acetate plus prednisone/prednisolone (AAP) in hormone-sensitive prostate cancer.
- Results based on 2201 men (82% of all eligible), including unreported analyses.
- Adding AAP to hormones substantially improves survival and progression-free survival.
- Benefits may vary with age, but not nodal or performance status, or Gleason score.
- No increased mortality with AAP, but more cardiac, vascular and hepatic toxicity.
Abstract
Background
There
is a need to synthesise the results of numerous randomised controlled
trials evaluating the addition of therapies to androgen deprivation
therapy (ADT) for men with metastatic hormone-sensitive prostate cancer
(mHSPC). This systematic review aims to assess the effects of adding
abiraterone acetate plus prednisone/prednisolone (AAP) to ADT.
Methods
Using
our framework for adaptive meta-analysis (FAME), we started the review
process before trials had been reported and worked collaboratively with
trial investigators to anticipate when eligible trial results would
emerge. Thus, we could determine the earliest opportunity for reliable
meta-analysis and take account of unavailable trials in interpreting
results. We searched multiple sources for trials comparing AAP plus ADT
versus ADT in men with mHSPC. We obtained results for the primary
outcome of overall survival (OS), secondary outcomes of
clinical/radiological progression-free survival (PFS) and grade III–IV
and grade V toxicity direct from trial teams. Hazard ratios (HRs) for
the effects of AAP plus ADT on OS and PFS, Peto Odds Ratios (Peto ORs)
for the effects on acute toxicity and interaction HRs for the effects on
OS by patient subgroups were combined across trials using fixed-effect
meta-analysis.
Findings
We identified three eligible trials, one of which was still recruiting (PEACE-1 (NCT01957436)). Results from the two remaining trials (LATITUDE (NCT01715285) and STAMPEDE (NCT00268476)),
representing 82% of all men randomised to AAP plus ADT versus ADT
(without docetaxel in either arm), showed a highly significant 38%
reduction in the risk of death with AAP plus ADT (HR = 0.62, 95%
confidence interval [CI] = 0.53–0.71, p = 0.55 × 10−10), that
translates into a 14% absolute improvement in 3-year OS. Despite
differences in PFS definitions across trials, we also observed a
consistent and highly significant 55% reduction in the risk of
clinical/radiological PFS (HR = 0.45, 95% CI = 0.40–0.51, p = 0.66 × 10−36)
with the addition of AAP, that translates to a 28% absolute improvement
at 3 years. There was no evidence of a difference in the OS benefit by
Gleason sum score, performance status or nodal status, but the size of
the benefit may vary by age. There were more grade III–IV acute cardiac,
vascular and hepatic toxicities with AAP plus ADT but no excess of
other toxicities or death.
Interpretation
Adding
AAP to ADT is a clinically effective treatment option for men with
mHSPC, offering an alternative to docetaxel for men who are starting
treatment for the first time. Future research will need to address which
of these two agents or whether their combination is most effective, and
for whom.
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