Article : Effect of Soy Protein Isolate Supplementation...

Effect of Soy Protein Isolate Supplementation on Biochemical Recurrence of Prostate Cancer After Radical Prostatectomy

A Randomized Trial

Maarten C. Bosland, DVSc, PhD; Ikuko Kato, MD, PhD; Anne Zeleniuch-Jacquotte, MS, MD; Joanne Schmoll, AAS, RN, CCRC; Erika Enk Rueter, BA, MPH; Jonathan Melamed, MD; Max Xiangtian Kong, MD; Virgilia Macias, MD; Andre Kajdacsy-Balla, MD, PhD; L. H. Lumey, MD, PhD; Hui Xie, PhD; Weihua Gao, MS; Paul Walden, PhD; Herbert Lepor, MD; Samir S. Taneja, MD; Carla Randolph, BS; Michael J. Schlicht, MS; Hiroko Meserve-Watanabe, PhD; Ryan J. Deaton, BS; Joanne A. Davies, MS


ABSTRACT

Importance  Soy consumption has been suggested to reduce risk or recurrence of prostate cancer, but this has not been tested in a randomized trial with prostate cancer as the end point.

Objective  To determine whether daily consumption of a soy protein isolate supplement for 2 years reduces the rate of biochemical recurrence of prostate cancer after radical prostatectomy or delays such recurrence.

Design, Setting, and Participants  Randomized, double-blind trial conducted from July 1997 to May 2010 at 7 US centers comparing daily consumption of a soy protein supplement vs placebo in 177 men at high risk of recurrence after radical prostatectomy for prostate cancer. Supplement intervention was started within 4 months after surgery and continued for up to 2 years, with prostate-specific antigen (PSA) measurements made at 2-month intervals in the first year and every 3 months thereafter.

Intervention  Participants were randomized to receive a daily serving of a beverage powder containing 20 g of protein in the form of either soy protein isolate (n=87) or, as placebo, calcium caseinate (n=90).

Main Outcomes and Measures  Biochemical recurrence rate of prostate cancer (defined as development of a PSA level of ≥0.07 ng/mL) over the first 2 years following randomization and time to recurrence.

Results  The trial was stopped early for lack of treatment effects at a planned interim analysis with 81 evaluable participants in the intervention group and 78 in the placebo group. Overall, 28.3% of participants developed biochemical recurrence within 2 years of entering the trial (close to the a priori predicted recurrence rate of 30%). Among these, 22 (27.2%) occurred in the intervention group and 23 (29.5%) in the placebo group. The resulting hazard ratio for active treatment was 0.96 (95% CI, 0.53-1.72; log-rank P = .89). Adherence was greater than 90% and there were no apparent adverse events related to supplementation.

Conclusion and Relevance  Daily consumption of a beverage powder supplement containing soy protein isolate for 2 years following radical prostatectomy did not reduce biochemical recurrence of prostate cancer in men at high risk of PSA failure.

Trial Registration  clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00765479

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