Literature DB >> 14634400

No apparent benefit at 5 years from a course of neoadjuvant/concurrent androgen deprivation for patients with prostate cancer treated with a high total radiation dose.

Alvaro Martinez1, Razvan Galalae, Jose Gonzalez, Christina Mitchell, Gary Gustafson, Gyorgy Kovacs.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: We examined the survival impact of a course of 6 months or less of adjuvant/concurrent androgen deprivation in patients with unfavorable prostate cancer treated to high radiation doses with external beam (EBRT) and a high dose rate (HDR) brachytherapy boost.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: Between 1986 and 2000, 507 patients were treated with pelvic EBRT (46 Gy) with HDR prostate brachytherapy as a boost. The biological equivalent EBRT dose was between 90 and 130 Gy. At Kiel University and at William Beaumont Hospital 198 and 309 patients were treated. Patient eligibility was pretreatment prostate specific antigen 10 ng/ml or greater, Gleason score 7 or greater, or clinical stage T2b or greater. The brachytherapy dose was escalated from 5.5 x 3 to 15 x 2 Gy. Patients were divided between 177 receiving and 330 not receiving androgen suppression therapy (AST). AST was given for a mean of 6 months. The American Society for Therapeutic Radiology and Oncology biochemical failure definition was used.
RESULTS: Mean patient age was 68 years. Mean followup was 4.8 years (range 0.7 to 15.3), that is 4.5 years for AST and 4.9 for radiation alone. Five-year actuarial rates for biochemical control were 74% and 76%, for overall survival they were 81% and 87%, and for disease-free survival they were 67% and 66%, while cause specific survival with and without AST was 90% and 98%, and the 5-year metastatic rates were 10.7% and 6.9%, respectively. On multivariate analysis AST did not improve biochemical control.
CONCLUSIONS: Pelvic EBRT interdigitated with a transrectal ultrasound guided HDR boost is an excellent method of delivering a high radiation dose to the prostate without rendering the patient radioactive. This trial showed high overall, cause specific and no biochemical evidence of disease survival. For this unfavorable group of patients the addition of a course of 6 months or less of neoadjuvant/concurrent AST to a high radiation dose did not appear to confer a 5-year therapeutic advantage. However, it added side effects and the significant cost of hormones.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 14634400     DOI: 10.1097/01.ju.0000096709.05800.48

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Urol        ISSN: 0022-5347            Impact factor:   7.450


  5 in total

1.  Significant association of brachytherapy boost with reduced prostate cancer-specific mortality in contemporary patients with localized, unfavorable-risk prostate cancer.

Authors:  Michael Xiang; Paul L Nguyen
Journal:  Brachytherapy       Date:  2015-10-17       Impact factor: 2.362

Review 2.  American Brachytherapy Society Task Group Report: Use of androgen deprivation therapy with prostate brachytherapy-A systematic literature review.

Authors:  M Keyes; G Merrick; S J Frank; P Grimm; M J Zelefsky
Journal:  Brachytherapy       Date:  2017-01-16       Impact factor: 2.362

3.  High-dose-rate brachytherapy combined with hypofractionated external beam radiotherapy for men with intermediate or high risk prostate cancer: analysis of short- and medium-term urinary toxicity and biochemical control.

Authors:  Antonio Cassio Assis Pellizzon; Ricardo Cesar Fogaroli; Maria Leticia Gobo Silva; Douglas Guedes Castro; Maria Conte Maia; Ademar Lopes
Journal:  Int J Clin Exp Med       Date:  2010-12-26

Review 4.  Androgen deprivation therapy for the treatment of prostate cancer: consider both benefits and risks.

Authors:  Hendrik Isbarn; Laurent Boccon-Gibod; Peter R Carroll; Francesco Montorsi; Claude Schulman; Matthew R Smith; Cora N Sternberg; Urs E Studer
Journal:  Eur Urol       Date:  2008-10-14       Impact factor: 20.096

5.  Long-term biochemical results after high-dose-rate intensity modulated brachytherapy with external beam radiotherapy for high risk prostate cancer.

Authors:  Pedro J Prada; Lucia Mendez; José Fernández; Herminio González; Isabel Jiménez; Elisabeth Arrojo
Journal:  Radiat Oncol       Date:  2012-03-07       Impact factor: 3.481

  5 in total

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