| Literature DB >> 24745018 |
Salvina Barra1, Stefano Vagge1, Michela Marcenaro1, Gladys Blandino2, Giorgia Timon2, Giulia Vidano2, Dario Agnese2, Marco Gusinu3, Francesca Cavagnetto3, Renzo Corvò4.
Abstract
AIM: To evaluate the toxicity of a hypofractionated schedule for primary radiotherapy (RT) of prostate cancer as well as the value of the nadir PSA (nPSA) and time to nadir PSA (tnPSA) as surrogate efficacy of treatment.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24745018 PMCID: PMC3976914 DOI: 10.1155/2014/541847
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Patient characteristics.
| Hypofractionated group | Comparative 3D-CRT group | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| RT 26 pts. (%) | RT + ADT 54 pts. (%) | RT 20 pts. (%) | |
| Stage | |||
| T1 | 7 (27) | 14 (26) | 13 (65) |
| T2 | 16 (62) | 28 (52) | 6 (30) |
| T3 | 3 (11) | 12 (22) | 1 (5) |
| N0 | 24 (92) | 46 (85) | 20 (100) |
| N1 | 2 (8) | 8 (15) | 0 |
| Gleason score | |||
| ≤6 | 16 (62) | 11 (20) | 14 (70) |
| >6 | 10 (48) | 43 (80) | 6 (30) |
| Risk category | |||
| Low | 10 (38) | 4 (7) | 12 (60) |
| Intermediate | 13 (50) | 15 (28) | 7 (35) |
| High | 3 (12) | 35 (65) | 1 (5) |
Pretreatment PSA.
| Mean | Median | Range (ng/mL) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hypofractionated group | |||
| All patients | 10.45 | 34.90 | 0.02–61.72 |
| RT only | 6.93 | 6.84 | 3.20–11.0 |
| RT + ADT | 12.10 | 7.50 | 0.02–61.72 |
| Comparative 3D-CRT group | |||
| RT only | 7.74 | 7.39 | 3.80–12.77 |
Figure 1Biochemical disease-free survival (bDFS) in exclusive RT and ADT + RT.
Figure 2Incidence of biochemical disease failure (bDF) for exclusive RT and ADT + RT.
Acute and late genitourinary toxicity.
| Toxicity | Grade 0 | Grade 1 | Grade 2 | Grade 3 | Grade 4 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Acute (80 pts.) | |||||
| All patients | 40 (50%) | 29 (36%) | 10 (13%) | 1 (4%) | 0 |
| RT (26 pts.) | 19 (73%) | 5 (19%) | 1 (4%) | 1 (4%) | 0 |
| RT + ADT (54 pts.) | 21 (39%) | 24 (44%) | 9 (17%) | 0 | 0 |
| Late (74 pts.) | |||||
| All patients | 65 (88%) | 6 (8%) | 3 (4%) | 0 | 0 |
| RT (25 pts.) | 23 (92%) | 2 (8%) | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| RT + ADT (49 pts.) | 42 (86%) | 4 (8%) | 3 (6%) | 0 | 0 |
Acute and late gastrointestinal toxicity.
| Toxicity | Grade 0 | Grade 1 | Grade 2 | Grade 3 | Grade 4 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Acute (80 pts.) | |||||
| All patients | 66 (83%) | 13 (16%) | 1 (4%) | 0 | 0 |
| RT (26 pts.) | 21 (81%) | 4 (15%) | 1 (4%) | 0 | 0 |
| RT + ADT (54 pts.) | 45 (83%) | 9 (17%) | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Late (74 pts.) | |||||
| All patients | 73 (99%) | 1 (4%) | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| RT (25 pts.) | 24 (96%) | 1 (4%) | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| RT + ADT (49 pts.) | 49 (100%) | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Figure 3Genitourinary toxicity.
Figure 4Gastrointestinal toxicity.
Figure 5Trend of the PSA to achieve nadir.
Figure 6Boxplot of the median nadir PSA between patients treated with exclusive radiotherapy with a conventional fractionation and hypofractionation. The difference between the two groups of median PSA nadir is significative.
Median nadir PSA after stereotactic series with extreme hypofractionation radiotherapy for prostate cancer.
| Author | Median FU (months) | Median nPSA (ng/mL) |
|---|---|---|
|
Katz et al. [ | 51 | 0.1 |
|
Mcbride et al. [ | 44 | 0.2 |
|
Freeman and King [ | 60 | 0.3 |
|
King et al. [ | 32 | 0.5 |
|
Bolzicco et al. [ | 36 | 0.6 (exclusive RT) |
| This report* | 36 | 0.18 (ADT + RT) |
| 36 | 0.08 (ADT + RT) | |
| 36 | 0.28 (exclusive RT) |
*Mild hypofractionation.