Periprostatic Neurolysis in Prostate Cancer

Clinicaltrials.gov ID: NCT07100847
db-list-check Status RECRUITING
b-loader Phase PHASE1
b-people Age ≥ 18 Years
b-bullseye-arrow Enrollments 21

Conditions

PROSTATE CANCER, NERVES, NEUROBIOLOGY OF CANCER, NEUROLYSIS

Summary

The purpose of this research study is to assess whether inhibiting nerve activity to the prostate delays progression of disease in men with high-risk clinical features for prostate cancer. Prostate cancer has been shown to invade nerves, a mechanism that is thought to be involved in prostate cancer spread in men with high-risk cancer. When nerve activity to the prostate is blocked in mice with prostate cancer, prostate cancer growth and spread are inhibited. In a previous study we showed that doing so in humans was safe and may have anticancer therapeutic effect. In this study we will test whether one versus two injections of nerve blocking agent is more effective at reducing nerves in the prostate and whether it will slow/stop spread of prostate cancer after treatment.

Detailed Description

Men with high-risk prostate cancer are at the greatest risk for clinical progression, with 22 to 40% developing metastatic disease within 10 years of initial treatment. Furthermore, the finding of perineural invasion (PNI) on pathology (when prostate cancer cells invade the nerves that innervate the prostate), is associated with higher Gleason grades and an approximate doubling in risk of lethal prostate cancer. As 90% of prostate cancer metastasis involve the bone marrow, and 97% of bone marrow metastasis involve the lumbar vertebrate from which the pre-ganglionic sympathetic nerves that innervate the prostate derive, targeting this neuro-anatomic connection between the prostate and its primary site of metastasis is an active area of investigation. Therefore, development of therapeutic strategies targeting nerves to prevent clinical progression after definitive therapy for prostate cancer are urgently needed. In a Phase 1a dose escalation study (NCT06703437) we recently demonstrated that periprostatic neurolysis with 5mL pure ethanol was well tolerated with no AEs. This resulted in an approximate 30% reduction in prostatic adrenergic nerve density. The goal of this study is to optimize prostatic denervation by comparing the denervation efficiency of 1 vs 2 periprostatic ethanol injections.

Locations

1 location Found with status Recruiting

Status

  • RECRUITING

Contact Person

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion criteria:

High risk prostate cancer as defined by NCCN criteria Desires surgical disease treatment (radical prostatectomy) Surgical candidate (for radical prostatectomy)

≤cT3a on MRI No seminal vesicle, lymph node, or metastatic disease on PSMA PET No prior prostate cancer treatment (including androgen deprivation therapy, radiation therapy, focal therapy, cryo therapy)

Study Plan

Single injection neurolysis

EXPERIMENTAL

Single injection of ethanol for periprostatic neurolysis

  • PROCEDURE:

    Periprostatic neurolysis with dehydrated alcohol (ethanol)

    Description:

    Pre-operative ultrasound guided periprostatic neurolysis by injection of dehydrated alcohol

Two injection neurolysis

EXPERIMENTAL

Two temporally separated periprostatic ethanol injections

  • PROCEDURE:

    Periprostatic neurolysis with dehydrated alcohol (ethanol)

    Description:

    Pre-operative ultrasound guided periprostatic neurolysis by injection of dehydrated alcohol

No injection control

    Outcome Measures

    Primary Outcome Measures

    Peritumoral adrenergic nerve density on final histology

    Time Frame: 4 to 6 weeks after treatment initiation

    Secondary Outcome Measures

    Change in sexual health inventory for men (SHIM) score

    Time Frame: 4 to 6 weeks after intervention

    Change in International Prostate Symptom Score (IPSS)

    Time Frame: 4 to 6 weeks after intervention

    Change in post prostatectomy penile length

    Time Frame: 6months after surgery

    Timeline

    • Last Updated
      September 9, 2025
    • Start Date
      August 3, 2025
    • Today
      March 13, 2026
    • Completion Date ( Estimated )
      August 1, 2028

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