| Literature DB >> 23504305 |
Caspian Oliai1, Rachelle Lanciano, Brian Sprandio, Jun Yang, John Lamond, Steven Arrigo, Michael Good, Michael Mooreville, Bruce Garber, Luther W Brady.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The low alpha/beta ratio of prostate cancer suggests that hypofractionated schemes of dose-escalated radiotherapy should be advantageous. We report our experience using stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) for the primary treatment of prostate cancer to assess efficacy and toxicity.Entities:
Keywords: Alpha/beta ratio; Dose escalation; Hypofractionation; Prostate cancer; Stereotactic body radiation therapy
Year: 2012 PMID: 23504305 PMCID: PMC3594824 DOI: 10.1007/s13566-012-0067-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Radiat Oncol ISSN: 1948-7908
Fig. 1CyberKnife SBRT treatment plan (36.25 Gy × 5 fractions prescribed to the 81 % isodose line (white) with a 44.75 Gy maximum dose. Shown are the prostate (43.6 cm3, red) and PTV (77.8 cm3, orange). A bladder (green) volume of 1.66 cm3 received 37 Gy and 0.4 cm3 of the rectum (yellow) received 36 Gy
Patient and tumor characteristics
| All patients | High dose | Low dose | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Number | 70 | 29 | 41 |
| Dose ( | |||
| 35 Gy | 5 | 0 | 5 |
| 36.25 Gy | 36 | 0 | 36 |
| 37.5 Gy | 29 | 29 | 0 |
| Age (years) | |||
| Median (range) | 68 (46–88) | 67 (46–80) | 68 (51–88) |
| CTV (cm3) | |||
| Median (range) | 47.5 (19.0–162.2) | 49.87 (31.6–162.2) | 44.4 (19.0–107.9) |
| iPSA (ng/ml) | |||
| Median (range) | 5.6 (1.1–39.4) | 5.7 (1.1–29.5) | 5.6 (1.6–39.4) |
| Tumor stage ( | |||
| T1b | 1 | 0/0 % | 1/2 % |
| T1c | 52 | 21/73 % | 31/77 % |
| T2a | 7 | 5/17 % | 2/4 % |
| T2b | 4 | 3/10 % | 1/2 % |
| T2c | 6 | 0/0 % | 6/15 % |
| Gleason score ( | |||
| 5 | 2 | 1/3 % | 1/2 % |
| 6 | 39 | 15/52 % | 24/59 % |
| 7 | 23 | 10/35 % | 13/32 % |
| 8 | 6 | 3/10 % | 3/7 % |
| Risk group ( | |||
| Low | 36/51 % | 14/48 % | 23/56 % |
| Intermediate | 22/31 % | 11/38 % | 10/24 % |
| High | 12/17 % | 4/14 % | 8/20 % |
| Maximum baseline GU toxicity grade ( | |||
| I | 36/51 % | 16/55 % | 20/49 % |
| II | 9/13 % | 3/10 % | 6/15 % |
| Treatment groups ( | |||
| Monotherapy | 47/67 % | 20/69 % | 27/66 % |
| Neoadjuvant | 23/33 % | 9/31 % | 14/34 % |
| Consecutive treatment days (Mon–Fri) ( | |||
| Consecutive days | 12/17 % | 4/14 % | 8/20 % |
PSA nadir for patients in the monotherapy group without biochemical failure separated by risk group
| ≤0.1 ng/ml | 0.1 < | 0.5 < | 1.0 < | >1.5 ng/ml | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Monotherapy, n = 47 | 8/17 % | 25/53 % | 7/15 % | 2/4 % | 5/11 % |
| Low, | 6/19 % | 15/47 % | 6/19 % | 2/6 % | 3/9 % |
| Int, | 1/10 % | 6/60 % | 1/10 % | 2/20 % | |
| High, | 1/20 % | 4/80 % |
PSA response and toxicity by dose group
| Dose group | Median follow-up (months) | Biochemical Failure (n) | Median PSA nadir to date (ng/ml) | Late GU toxicity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Grade II | Grade III | ||||
| High dose, | 37 (24–48) | 0 | 0.2 | 7/24 % | 2/7 % |
| Low dose, | 27 (13–51) | 3 | 0.43 | 13/32 % | 0 |
Fig. 2FFBF for a all patients, b intermediate- and high-risk patients by dose group and c all patients by risk group
Acute and late maximum toxicity assessed by the RTOG toxicity scale
| Grade I | Grade II | Grade III | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Acute toxicity | |||
| GU | 39/56 % | 13/19 % | 3/4 % |
| Low dose | 22/54 % | 9/22 % | 2/5 % |
| High dose | 17/59 % | 4/14 % | 1/3 % |
| GI | 12/17 % | 3/4 % | 0 % |
| Low dose | 8/20 % | 3/7 % | |
| High dose | 4/14 % | ||
| Late toxicity | |||
| GU | 31/44 % | 20/29 % | 2/3 % |
| Low dose | 17/41 % | 13/32 % | |
| High dose | 14/48 % | 7/24 % | 2/7 % |
| GI | 7/10 % | 6/9 % | 0 % |
| Low dose | 4/10 % | 4/10 % | |
| High dose | 3/10 % | 2/7 % | |
| EDa | 8/28 % | 5/17 % | 0 % |
| Low dose | 4/25 % | 3/19 % | |
| High dose | 4/31 % | 2/15 % | |
aED assessed by CTCAE v3
SBRT publications for primary treatment of prostate cancer
| Author | Dose scheme | No. of patients | Risk group | Median follow-up (mo) | Freedom from biochemical failure (by risk) | Late grade III GU/GI Toxicity | Patients receiving ADT |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oliai et al. 2012 | 7.0, 7.25 and 7.5 Gy × 5 | 70 | low, int, high | 31 | 100 %, 94.7 %, 77.1 % 3-year | 3 %/0 % | 33 % |
| King et al. 2012 | 7.25 Gy × 5 | 67 | low | 32 | 94 % 4-year | 3 %/0 % | none |
| McBride et al. 2011 | 7.25 and 7.5 Gy × 5 | 45 | low | 44 | 97.7 % 3-year | 2 %/5 % | none (within 6 months of treatment) |
| Boike et al. 2011 | 9, 9.5, and 10 Gy × 5 | 45 | low, int | 30/18/12 by dose | 100 % | 4 %/2 % (Gr 4) | 22 % |
| Kang et al. 2011 | 8, 8.5, and 9 Gy × 4 | 44 | low, int, high | 40 | 100 %, 100 %, 90.8 % | 0 %/0 % | 87 % |
| Freeman et al. 2011 | 7 and 7.25 Gy × 5 | 41 | low | 60 | 92.7 % 5-year | 2.5 %/0 % | none |
| Bolzicco et al. 2010 | 7 Gy × 5 | 45 | low, int | 20 | 100 % | 2.2 %/0 % | 38 % |
| Katz et al. 2010 | 7 and 7.25 Gy × 5 | 304 | low, int, high | 30 | 99 %, 84 %, 100 % | <1 %/0 % | 19 % |
| Friedland et al. 2009 | 7 and 7.25 Gy × 5 | 112 | low, int, high | 24 | 97.3 % | 0 %/<1 % | 19 % |
| Madsen et al. 2007 | 6.7 Gy × 5 | 40 | low | 41 | 90 % 4-year | 0 %/0 % | none |