A new trial will look at whether selecting patients who may require more intensive treatment can improve outcomes for advanced prostate cancer.

The aim is to improve survival by delaying the progression of cancer that has spread to other parts of the body (metastatic cancer).

The INTENSIFY trial is led by researchers at the University of Glasgow, Southampton Clinical Trials Unit, University Hospital Southampton and UCL, and is funded by a £1.9m grant from Prostate Cancer UK.Prostate cancer is the most common cancer in men in the UK, with one in eight men likely to be diagnosed with the disease during their lifetime*. Prognosis for the disease, especially when diagnosed in its early stages, is generally good, with eight in ten patients surviving over ten years.

But when the cancer spreads to other parts of the body, called metastatic prostate cancer, it becomes incurable and there are still around 12,000 prostate cancer deaths in the UK every year.

For patients with metastatic prostate cancer, the initial treatment for most men is a doublet therapy of two different hormone treatments. These reduce the amount of testosterone produced by the body, and also block its effects, thereby helping slow the growth of the cancer.

Patients are monitored using a PSA (prostate specific antigen) blood test to see whether the cancer is responding to treatment.

Professor Crabb, who is also an Associate Clinical Director at the Southampton Clinical Trials Unit, is leading the INTENSIFY trial to try and establish the optimum timing for these treatments in patients with high-risk metastatic prostate cancer.

“Most patients will see a reduction in their PSA after starting hormone therapy,” says Simon Crabb, Professor of Experimental Cancer Therapeutics at the University of Southampton and Honorary Consultant of Medical Oncology at University Hospital Southampton. “But if the PSA remains at a higher level after 6 months of treatment, this indicates poorer long-term outcomes, including survival.”

“There is evidence that adding chemotherapy early on could prevent further cancer growth. However, chemotherapy will mean more, potentially unpleasant, side effects for patients which can affect their quality of life.”

The INTENSIFY trial will recruit patients whose PSA levels indicate that their cancer may not be responding as well to doublet hormone treatment. 

Prof Rob Jones, Professor of Clinical Cancer Research at the University of Glasgow’s School of Cancer Sciences, who works within the Beatson West of Scotland Cancer Centre, said: “This is a really important trial for patients with advanced prostate cancer, and I’m delighted that Prostate Cancer UK have funded this work.

“The trial is jointly led by three probate cancer oncologists including myself, alongside my long-standing collaborators in Southampton and UCL. We’re delivering the trial for the Cancer Trials Unit in Southampton but anticipate opening the trial in 20 or more hospitals around the UK, including the Beatson West of Scotland Cancer Centre in Glasgow.”

Denise Dunkley, Portfolio Lead for Urology Trials at the Southampton Clinical Trials Unit, added: “Patients will be randomly assigned to either a control arm, where they will continue with hormone treatment alone, which is the standard treatment, or an intervention arm where they will have a chemotherapy drug called docetaxel added to their treatment straight away.

“Every patient will be closely monitored to see how their cancer responds and the side effects they experience. All patients may be offered other standard treatments if their cancer gets worse, but they will continue to be in the trial and followed up until the end of the trial.”

The trial also aims to build on novel insights, made by Prof Gert Attard at UCL. These suggest we may be able to select which prostate cancers are sensitive to chemotherapy based on patterns in the genes that they express. The team are collaborating with a global diagnostics company called Veracyte, which will analyse tumour samples taken from the INTENSIFY participants using the Decipher Prostate Genomic Classifier to test these gene expression patterns.

Professor Attard said: “Prostate Cancer UK had funded discovery of novel molecular biomarkers, or genetic clues, that predict when chemotherapy will work. A really exciting part of this trial, also funded by Prostate Cancer UK, is that we will formally test whether patients identified by these biomarkers live significantly longer when given chemotherapy. These could then become established for use for all patients.”

The trial is being funded by Prostate Cancer UK as part of its Transformational Impact Awards.

Simon Grieveson, Assistant Director of Research at Prostate Cancer UK, said: “We’re thrilled to be funding this groundbreaking trial, building on our history of supporting cutting-edge research to improve and personalise men’s prostate cancer treatment. For men with metastatic prostate cancer, it’s hard to predict who will respond well to hormone therapy and who may need additional treatment, such as chemotherapy. INTENSIFY will show us whether we can reserve this more intensive treatment combination for those who are most likely to benefit, whilst delaying the use of chemotherapy in others who are responding well to their hormone therapy. Central to all of this is our aim to reduce harmful side-effects and improve men’s quality of life and the time they can spend with family and friends.

"At Prostate Cancer UK, we’ve invested over £120 million into research into the most common cancer in men, particularly towards developing more personalised treatment approaches tailored to every man and their prostate cancer. INTENSIFY is the next step on this journey, and we’re really looking forward to seeing the results of the trial.”

INTENSIFY will recruit 518 patients at around 20 hospital sites across the UK. The trial, which is sponsored by University Hospital Southampton, is currently in set-up and is due to open to patients in the new year.

 

 

 

 

 


Enquiries: ali.howard@glasgow.ac.uk or elizabeth.mcmeekin@glasgow.ac.uk

 

First published: 20 November 2025