Benjamin Mercier, BS1,2; Andrew Tam, MD2; Daniela Castro, MS1; Salvador Jaime-Casas, MD1; Abhishek Tripathi, MD1; Yun Rose Li, MD, PhD2,3,4; Regina Barragan-Carrillo, MD1
1 Department of Medical Oncology, City of Hope Comprehensive Cancer Center, Duarte, California
2 Department of Radiation Oncology, City of Hope Comprehensive Cancer Center, Duarte, California
3 Department of Cancer Genetics and Epigenetics, City of Hope Comprehensive Cancer Center, Duarte, California
4 Division of Quantitative Medicine & Systems Biology, Translational Genomics Research Institute, Phoenix, Arizona
KEYWORDS:
Prostate neoplasm; radiation therapy; neoplasm metastasis; prostatic neoplasms, castration-resistant; androgen antagonists
We present the case of a patient diagnosed with de novo, low-volume metastatic prostate cancer who received first-line treatment with androgen-deprivation therapy in combination with darolutamide. The patient presented with symptoms derived from local growth from the primary tumor and received pelvic radiation therapy to the primary tumor and pelvic nodes. He experienced complete tumor regression, with high serum prostate-specific antigen declining to nondetectable levels. Next-generation genomic analysis indicated high tumor mutation burden and high microsatellite status instability. Here, we contextualize this patient’s case regarding the importance of precision genomics in radiation oncology and its potential importance for optimizing treatment.
Prostate cancer (PCa) is 1 of the most common types of cancer in adult men, with an estimated 299 010 new diagnoses and 35 250 deaths in 2024 in the United States.1 Only 5% to 10% of all patients with PCa are diagnosed with metastatic disease, and metastatic PCa is responsible for 50% of all PCa-related deaths.2 Androgen-deprivation therapy (ADT) is the cornerstone treatment for metastatic hormone-sensitive PCa (mHSPC),3 and augmenting ADT with chemotherapy or novel androgen receptor synthesis inhibitors (ARSIs) has increased patient survival.4 Despite these substantial advances in systemic treatment, mHSPC remains a challenge because patients will eventually develop castration resistance, which limits their systemic treatment options.
The role of radiation therapy (RT) to the primary tumor in the setting of mHSPC continues to be an area of active investigation. Current guidelines now recommend RT to the primary tumor as standard of care for patients with de novo mHSPC and low metastatic burden on the basis of results from the Systemic Therapy in Advancing or Metastatic Prostate Cancer: Evaluation of Drug Efficacy (STAMPEDE) trial.3,5 Treatment selection is still based solely on tumor burden, however, as assessed by conventional imaging. Several efforts have been made to tailor systemic treatment for patients with metastatic PCa, such as the identification of specific therapeutic targets through germline and somatic testing and the development of targeted therapies.6,7 Data supporting the role of molecular testing and genetic profiling in patients with metastatic PCa who could benefit from RT to the primary tumor remain scarce.2,8
Here, we present the case of a man diagnosed with low-volume mHSPC with substantial somatic mutations and tumor mutation burden (TMB). The patient gave written informed consent before the publication of this article.
The patient is a 68-year-old Latino man with a history of mild cognitive impairment. He initially presented to the emergency department with substantial rectal pain and bleeding in late 2022. In early 2023, a computed tomographic scan of the patient’s abdomen and pelvis revealed a perirectal mass measuring 3.7 × 5.0 × 4.9 cm. This mass was later confirmed by colonoscopy to occupy approximately 50% of the circumference of the distal rectum and anal canal. Subsequent biopsy of the mass confirmed high-grade adenocarcinoma of the prostate, with a Gleason score of 10 (5 + 5). Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the pelvis revealed the full extent of the mass, which measured 6.1 × 7.1 × 8.1 cm and involved the posterior half of the prostate gland, the rectal wall, and the rectal prostatic space. Several enlarged lymph nodes were observed in varying locations of the pelvis and lower abdomen, including an external iliac lymph node measuring 3.5 × 2.3 × 2.1 cm and multiple inguinal lymph nodes (Figure 1A). Piflufolastat fluorine-18 prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) positron emission tomography imaging showed PSMA avidity in the primary tumor and in the aforementioned enlarged lymph nodes. The PSMA avidity did not suggest the presence of osseous or visceral metastases (Figure 1B). Disease staging per American Joint Committee on Cancer, version 8, was finalized as stage IVb (cT4b, cN1, cM1) de novo, low-volume mHSPC.
First-line treatment with ADT and an androgen receptor inhibitor, darolutamide, was promptly initiated. A follow-up pelvic MRI scan after 3 months showed an initial response to treatment, with a substantial decrease in the size of the prostate gland (3.0 × 1.8 × 4.0 cm) and lymph nodules, including the external iliac lymph nodule (2.7 × 0.9 cm), but disease involvement in the rectal wall persisted. In mid-2023, after 4 months of ADT, the patient’s prostate-specific antigen (PSA) serum levels rose from 1.12 µg/L (ng/mL) to 2.15 µg/L within 4 weeks, indicating early castration resistance. An additional MRI scan after 6 months of ADT revealed a substantial increase in the size of the perirectal mass (4.7 × 3.4 × 6.5 cm), a mild increase in the size of the iliac nodal metastasis, and new mesorectal and presacral nodules. Nextgeneration sequencing of the pretreatment sample of the primary tumor revealed the presence of a considerable number of missense and stop-gain alterations in actionable target genes and a high TMB, with 21 alterations per megabase. These genes include ATM, BAP1, FLT3, MSH6, NF1, PTEN, RB1, SPOP, TP53, and JAK1 (see Supplemental Figure 1, available online).
Figure 1. Imaging of patient disease, from near-initial diagnosis to after pelvic radiation therapy. (A) Magnetic resonance image of the pelvis close to initial presentation demonstrates the presence of the primary mass and enlarged left external iliac lymph node. (B) Piflufolastat fluorine-18 prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) positron emission tomography imaging after initiation of androgen-deprivation therapy indicates PSMA avidity and disease presence in the primary tumor and iliac lymph node. (C) Magnetic resonance image of the pelvis within 1 week of completion of pelvic radiation therapy demonstrates a substantially decreased primary mass, indicating excellent response to treatment.
Given the increase in PSA levels, despite an initial response to treatment, a course of pelvic external beam RT was initiated to maintain local disease control. The patient received 45 Gy in 25 fractions to the pelvis, followed by an additional 24-Gy boost dose in 8 fractions (total dose of 69 Gy) to the prostate, seminal vesicles, and rectal mass. The patient completed RT in late 2023 with no major adverse events noted. In the month following external beam RT, serum PSA levels declined to undetectable levels (Figure 2). Subsequent MRI scans revealed a further substantial decrease in the rectal component, now measuring 3.0 × 1.5 cm compared with the previously measured 4.7 × 3.4 cm (Figure 1C). Iliac and femoral lymphadenopathy also saw substantial improvement, with both nodes measuring 1.0 cm or smaller. More notably, the patient reported substantial improvement of his rectal pain and bleeding. As of early 2024, the patient has continued receiving ADT and darolutamide, with undetectable serum PSA levels and minimal lasting complications related to treatment.
Figure 2. Patient serum prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels over the duration of treatment fell from 6.43 µg/L to undetectable levels after initiating androgen-deprivation therapy (ADT) and pelvic radiation therapy (RT). Androgen-deprivation therapy remains ongoing.
We report the case of a patient with newly diagnosed, low-volume mHSPC who initially developed early castration resistance and received RT to the primary tumor, with partial radiologic response and complete biochemical response. After 8 months, the patient has remained without disease progression. On somatic testing, the patient’s disease had a high TMB, high microsatellite instability, and a missense alteration in ATM and other genes that may suggest remarkable response to treatment.
Evidence increasingly supports the role of RT in the treatment of primary tumors in patients with mHSPC, but this area remains a subject of investigation, and opting for RT to the primary tumor should be based on clinical characteristics and individual patient selection. A large registry study using the National Cancer Database reported a statistically significant increase in overall survival (OS) in patients with mHSPC who received RT to the primary tumor in addition to ADT.9 The HORRAD trial10 was the first clinical trial to randomly assign patients with mHSPC to receive ADT with or without RT to the primary tumor. The trial did not, however, demonstrate an improvement in OS in patients receiving RT. Notably, there was a trend toward better OS in patients with 5 or fewer bone lesions who received RT to the primary tumor.10 Following that trial, arm H of the STAMPEDE trial demonstrated that RT to the primary tumor, in addition to ADT, improved OS in patients with mHSPC and a low metastatic burden, defined as fewer than 4 bone metastases and no visceral involvement.11 Recently, the Phase III Study for Patients With Metastatic Hormone-naïve Prostate Cancer (PEACE1) trial evaluated the role of adding RT to the primary tumor in patients receiving systemic treatment with a triplet regimen of ADT, abiraterone, and docetaxel. In this trial, adding RT to the primary tumor did not improve OS but did reduce severe urinary symptoms.12 Effect of Statins on Oxidative Stress and Endothelial Progenitor Cells (STOPCAP),13 a meta-analysis that used patient data obtained across the STAMPEDE, HORRAD, and PEACE1 trials to examine the role of prostate RT for patients with mHSPC, reinforced these findings. The meta-analysis found that OS and progression-free survival did not improve in patients with low metastatic burden who received RT; however, in congruence with previous data, a statistically significant improvement was noted in time to biochemical progression and failure-free survival. Additional analysis showed a 7% improvement in 3-year survival in patients with fewer than 5 bone metastases.13 Regarding ongoing investigations for the role of RT in metastatic PCa, the Southwest Oncology Group’s SWOG-1802 trial14 is an ongoing phase 3 trial investigating the role of definitive treatment, including prostatectomy and RT, alongside standard systemic treatment (ie, combination ADT and ARSI) for patients with de novo metastatic PCa.
In addition, preclinical evidence has pointed to a synergistic effect of RT with ARSIs in PCa cells, showing decreased cell viability with increased DNA strand breaks compared with control patients who did not receive RT.15 In the clinical setting, the STAMPEDE trial proved the synergistic effect of concomitant ADT with an ARSI in combination with RT in patients with high-risk nonmetastatic PCa, including node-positive disease.16
Analysis of tumor suppressor genes as potential prognostic gene expression signatures in the setting of mHSPC from the Chemohormonal Therapy Versus Androgen Ablation Randomized Trial for Extensive Disease in Prostate Cancer (CHAARTED) trial suggests that somatic mutations in RB1, PTEN, and TP53 are correlated with adverse outcomes when treated solely with ADT with or without docetaxel.17 Furthermore, long-term follow-up and analysis of potential genetic predictors from the Surveillance or metastasis-directed Therapy for OligoMetastatic Prostate cancer recurrence (STOMP) and Observation versus Stereotactic Ablative Radiation for OLigometastatic Prostate CancEr (ORIOLE) trials revealed that carrying somatic mutations in ATM, BRCA1/2, RB1, or TP53 indicated a more statistically significant sustained clinical benefit in response to metastasis-directed RT for patients with oligometastatic PCa vs patients without these alterations.18
The use of precision medicine to predict the benefit of RT in patients with metastatic PCa has not been conclusively established in clinical practice. This gap is primarily attributed to the limited availability of clinical evidence, a lack of consensus, associated costs, and overall feasibility.19 Currently, specific efforts are being made only to integrate molecular testing to predict the benefit of RT. The Post-Operative Radiation Therapy Outcomes Score (PORTOS) is a predictive signature of distant metastasis risk after RT that was developed by incorporating the expression of 24 genes.20 In a validation cohort, patients treated with RT had a decreased incidence of distant metastases within the high PORTOS group but not the low PORTOS group, providing a proof of concept for the integration of molecular markers within a selection of patients who could benefit from RT in addition to systemic therapy.20
Several gene signatures have been identified in the setting of localized PCa that correlate to more aggressive localized disease, progression to metastatic disease, and radiation resistance. Thangavel and colleagues21 determined that the loss of a functional RB gene resulted in enhanced radiation sensitivity in multiple hormone-sensitive and hormonal-resistant PCa cell lines. Further analysis by Thangavel indicated that a loss of function in RB in murine models promoted a disease phenotype that is substantially more susceptible to metastatic progression.22 Loss of PTEN has also been associated with an increased likelihood of metastatic progression and resistance to androgen deprivation and chemotherapies, with as many as 50% of castration-resistant tumors being PTEN deficient.23 In a postprostatectomy setting, alterations in ERG resulting in negative expression were strongly associated with immediate progression; a similar trend was noted in patients with aberrant PTEN expression.24 Clinical validation for the use of these genes as predictive biomarkers remains sparse, especially in the setting of metastatic disease. Preliminary clinical and preclinical models examining these genes and others have shown promise regarding their prognostic capability for disease progression and therapeutic response in PCa. Further validation of these single and multigene prognostic indicators in patients within clinical setting is vital.
In the setting of metastatic castration-resistant PCa (mCRPC), exploratory studies investigating the use of radiopharmaceutical therapies, such as radium-223 or PSMA-directed radioligand therapies, have shown marked differences between patients with different somatic mutations. For example, an exploratory study by Isaacsson Velho and colleagues25 showed that patients with mCRPC and bony metastatic disease had statistically significantly better responses and longer time to progression while receiving radium-223 if they possessed germline or somatic alterations in genes involved in the homologous repair pathway (eg, BRCA2, ATM, ATR). In a study supplementing the Study of 177Lu-PSMA-617 In Metastatic Castrate-Resistant Prostate Cancer (VISION) trial that investigated the use of lutetium-177-PSMA-617 radioligand therapy in mCRPC, patients with gain-of-function alterations in plasma androgen receptor genes demonstrated greater susceptibility to earlier disease progression and lower OS.26 Existing clinical and preclinical evidence in external beam and radiopharmaceutical therapies indicates a growing need for the integration of precision medicine and genomics when evaluating a patient with PCa and their treatment needs.
The profound response of this patient’s tumor to RT in the context of its initially middling response to ADT and darolutamide provides some evidence for the integration of precision medicine in the context of metastatic PCa and evaluation for RT. Castration resistance currently presents a massive obstacle in the long-term management of metastatic PCa, and greater adoption of precision medicine could provide the means to reduce reliance on ADT and ARSIs alone for long-term disease management. The basis for using precision medicine has already been laid in the context of metastatic PCa, with the US Food and Drug Administration having already approved the use of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase inhibitors in mCRPC. Disease management through poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase inhibitors largely relies on observing somatic deficiencies in homologous recombination repair genes, such as BRCA1/2.27
We speculate that in this patient, high TMB, alongside other associated factors, may have played a role in the complete response to RT to the primary tumor after indication of early castration resistance. Although precision medicine in oncology has grown substantially in recent years, its scope remains limited. Genomic and transcriptomic sequencing analysis has been more frequently adopted for systemic treatment selection in patients with cancer, although adoption of this rapidly evolving technology is not yet universal in all areas of oncology. Although little pretext has been established in the literature, we believe that this case emphasizes the importance of expanding precision medicine in the context of metastatic PCa and highlights the potential role of RT in local control and overall disease management.
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Published: December 13, 2024.
Conflict of Interest Disclosures: The authors have nothing to disclose.
Funding/Support: This study did not receive external funding.
Author Contributions: Concept and design: B.M., R.B.C., and Y.R.L. Drafting of the article: B.M. and R.B.C. Critical review of the manuscript for important intellectual content: A. Ta., D.C., S.J.C., A.Tr., Y.R.L., and R.B.C. Administrative, technical, or material support: B.M., R.B.C., and Y.R.L. Supervision: R.B.C., A.Ta., A.Tr., and Y.R.L.
Data Availability Statement: The data supporting the findings of this clinical case are available from the corresponding author upon request, subject to consideration of ethics and patient privacy.
Supplementary Material: All supplementary material is available at https://journals.specialtynetworks.com/issues/vol/23/no/4/exceptional-response-to-radiation-therapy-to-the-primary-tumor-in-a-patient-with-de-novo-meta-static-prostate-cancer-with-high-tumor-mutation-burden.
Citation: Mercier B, Tam A, Castro D, et al. Exceptional response to radiation therapy to the primary tumor in a patient with de novo metastatic prostate cancer with high tumor mutation burden. Rev Urol. 2024;23(4):e71-e78.
Corresponding author: Regina Barragan-Carrillo, MD, City of Hope Comprehensive Cancer Center, 1500 E Duarte Rd, Duarte, CA 91010 (rbarragancarrillo@coh.org)