Moderate hypofractionated post-prostatectomy radiation therapy is feasible and well tolerated: experience from a single tertiary cancer centre
Autor: | M. García-Aranda, X. Chen-Zhao, C. Rubio, Ovidio Hernando, Angel Montero, M. Lopez, R. Ciérvide, José V. Martí, M. Izquierdo, J. Valero, B Álvarez, Emilio Sánchez, P. Fernández-Letón, R. Alonso |
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Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: |
0301 basic medicine
Cancer Research medicine.medical_specialty business.industry Prostatectomy Genitourinary system medicine.medical_treatment Urology General Medicine medicine.disease Radiation therapy Androgen deprivation therapy 03 medical and health sciences Prostate cancer 030104 developmental biology 0302 clinical medicine Oncology 030220 oncology & carcinogenesis Concomitant Medicine business Adverse effect Complication |
Zdroj: | Clinical and Translational Oncology. 23:1452-1462 |
ISSN: | 1699-3055 1699-048X |
Popis: | Conventional post-prostatectomy radiation therapy comprises 6.5–8 weeks of treatment, therefore, hypofractionated and shortened schemes arouse increasing interest. We describe our experience regarding feasibility and clinical outcome of a post-prostatectomy moderate hypofractionated image-guided radiotherapy schedule From Oct 2015–Mar 2020, 113 patients, median age of 62 years-old (range 45–76) and prostate adenocarcinoma of low risk (30%), intermediate risk (49%) and high risk (21%) were included for adjuvant (34%) or salvage radiation therapy (66%) after radical prostatectomy (RP). All patients underwent radiotherapy with image-guided IMRT/VMAT to a total dose of 62.5 Gy in 2.5 Gy/fraction in 25 fractions. Sixteen patients (14%) received concomitant androgen deprivation therapy. With a median follow-up of 29 months (range 3–60 months) all patients but three are alive. Eleven patients (10%) developed exclusive biochemical relapse while 19 patients (17%) presented macroscopically visible relapse: prostatectomy bed in two patients (2%), pelvic lymph nodes in 13 patients (11.5%) and distant metastases in four patients (4%). The 3 years actuarial rates for OS, bFRS, and DMFS were 99.1, 91.1 and 91.2%, respectively. Acute and late tolerance was satisfactory. Maximal acute genitourinary (AGU) toxicity was G2 in 8% of patients; maximal acute gastrointestinal (AGI) toxicity was G2 in 3.5% of patients; maximal late genitourinary (LGU) toxicity was G3 in 1% of patients and maximal late gastrointestinal (LGI) toxicity was G2 in 2% of patients. There were no cases of severe acute or late toxicity. No relationship was found between acute or late GI/GU adverse effects and dosimetric parameters, age, presence of comorbidities or concomitant treatments. Hypofractionated radiotherapy (62.5 Gy in 25 2.5 Gy fractions) is feasible and well tolerated with low complication rates allowing for a moderate dose-escalation that offers encouraging clinical results for biochemical control and survival in patients with prostate cancer after radical prostatectomy. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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