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Image guided dose escalated prostate radiotherapy: still room to improve

BACKGROUND: Prostate radiotherapy (RT) dose escalation has been reported to result in improved biochemical control at the cost of greater late toxicity. We report on the application of 79.8 Gy in 42 fractions of prostate image guided RT (IGRT). The primary objective was to assess 5-year biochemical...

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Autores principales: Martin, Jarad M, Bayley, Andrew, Bristow, Robert, Chung, Peter, Gospodarowicz, Mary, Menard, Cynthia, Milosevic, Michael, Rosewall, Tara, Warde, Padraig R, Catton, Charles N
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2777178/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19887007
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1748-717X-4-50
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author Martin, Jarad M
Bayley, Andrew
Bristow, Robert
Chung, Peter
Gospodarowicz, Mary
Menard, Cynthia
Milosevic, Michael
Rosewall, Tara
Warde, Padraig R
Catton, Charles N
author_facet Martin, Jarad M
Bayley, Andrew
Bristow, Robert
Chung, Peter
Gospodarowicz, Mary
Menard, Cynthia
Milosevic, Michael
Rosewall, Tara
Warde, Padraig R
Catton, Charles N
author_sort Martin, Jarad M
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Prostate radiotherapy (RT) dose escalation has been reported to result in improved biochemical control at the cost of greater late toxicity. We report on the application of 79.8 Gy in 42 fractions of prostate image guided RT (IGRT). The primary objective was to assess 5-year biochemical control and potential prognostic factors by the Phoenix definition. Secondary endpoints included acute and late toxicity by the Radiotherapy Oncology Group (RTOG) scoring scales. METHODS: From October/2001 and June/2003, 259 men were treated with at least 2-years follow-up. 59 patients had low, 163 intermediate and 37 high risk disease. 43 had adjuvant hormonal therapy (HT), mostly for high- or multiple risk factor intermediate-risk disease (n = 25). They received either 3-dimensional conformal RT (3DCRT, n = 226) or intensity modulated RT (IMRT) including daily on-line IGRT with intraprostatic fiducial markers. RESULTS: Median follow-up was 67.8 months (range 24.4-84.7). There was no severe (grade 3-4) acute toxicity, and grade 2 acute gastrointestinal (GI) toxicity was unusual (10.1%). The 5-year incidence of grade 2-3 late GI and genitourinary (GU) toxicity was 13.7% and 12.1%, with corresponding grade 3 figures of 3.5% and 2.0% respectively. HT had an association with an increased risk of grade 2-3 late GI toxicity (11% v 21%, p = 0.018). Using the Phoenix definition for biochemical failure, the 5 year-bNED is 88.4%, 76.5% and 77.9% for low, intermediate and high risk patients respectively. On univariate analysis, T-category and Gleason grade correlated with Phoenix bNED (p = 0.006 and 0.039 respectively). Hormonal therapy was not a significant prognostic factor on uni- or multi-variate analysis. Men with positive prostate biopsies following RT had a lower chance of bNED at 5 years (34.4% v 64.3%; p = 0.147). CONCLUSION: IGRT to 79.8 Gy results in favourable rates of late toxicity compared with published non-IGRT treated cohorts. Future avenues of investigation for toxicity reduction include IMRT, margin reduction, and dose modulation targeted to sites of disease burden. Further work is required to maximize efficacy beyond that achieved through radiation dose escalation alone.
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spelling pubmed-27771782009-11-15 Image guided dose escalated prostate radiotherapy: still room to improve Martin, Jarad M Bayley, Andrew Bristow, Robert Chung, Peter Gospodarowicz, Mary Menard, Cynthia Milosevic, Michael Rosewall, Tara Warde, Padraig R Catton, Charles N Radiat Oncol Research BACKGROUND: Prostate radiotherapy (RT) dose escalation has been reported to result in improved biochemical control at the cost of greater late toxicity. We report on the application of 79.8 Gy in 42 fractions of prostate image guided RT (IGRT). The primary objective was to assess 5-year biochemical control and potential prognostic factors by the Phoenix definition. Secondary endpoints included acute and late toxicity by the Radiotherapy Oncology Group (RTOG) scoring scales. METHODS: From October/2001 and June/2003, 259 men were treated with at least 2-years follow-up. 59 patients had low, 163 intermediate and 37 high risk disease. 43 had adjuvant hormonal therapy (HT), mostly for high- or multiple risk factor intermediate-risk disease (n = 25). They received either 3-dimensional conformal RT (3DCRT, n = 226) or intensity modulated RT (IMRT) including daily on-line IGRT with intraprostatic fiducial markers. RESULTS: Median follow-up was 67.8 months (range 24.4-84.7). There was no severe (grade 3-4) acute toxicity, and grade 2 acute gastrointestinal (GI) toxicity was unusual (10.1%). The 5-year incidence of grade 2-3 late GI and genitourinary (GU) toxicity was 13.7% and 12.1%, with corresponding grade 3 figures of 3.5% and 2.0% respectively. HT had an association with an increased risk of grade 2-3 late GI toxicity (11% v 21%, p = 0.018). Using the Phoenix definition for biochemical failure, the 5 year-bNED is 88.4%, 76.5% and 77.9% for low, intermediate and high risk patients respectively. On univariate analysis, T-category and Gleason grade correlated with Phoenix bNED (p = 0.006 and 0.039 respectively). Hormonal therapy was not a significant prognostic factor on uni- or multi-variate analysis. Men with positive prostate biopsies following RT had a lower chance of bNED at 5 years (34.4% v 64.3%; p = 0.147). CONCLUSION: IGRT to 79.8 Gy results in favourable rates of late toxicity compared with published non-IGRT treated cohorts. Future avenues of investigation for toxicity reduction include IMRT, margin reduction, and dose modulation targeted to sites of disease burden. Further work is required to maximize efficacy beyond that achieved through radiation dose escalation alone. BioMed Central 2009-11-03 /pmc/articles/PMC2777178/ /pubmed/19887007 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1748-717X-4-50 Text en Copyright © 2009 Martin et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Martin, Jarad M
Bayley, Andrew
Bristow, Robert
Chung, Peter
Gospodarowicz, Mary
Menard, Cynthia
Milosevic, Michael
Rosewall, Tara
Warde, Padraig R
Catton, Charles N
Image guided dose escalated prostate radiotherapy: still room to improve
title Image guided dose escalated prostate radiotherapy: still room to improve
title_full Image guided dose escalated prostate radiotherapy: still room to improve
title_fullStr Image guided dose escalated prostate radiotherapy: still room to improve
title_full_unstemmed Image guided dose escalated prostate radiotherapy: still room to improve
title_short Image guided dose escalated prostate radiotherapy: still room to improve
title_sort image guided dose escalated prostate radiotherapy: still room to improve
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2777178/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19887007
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1748-717X-4-50
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