Literature DB >> 25890179

Infections after fiducial marker implantation for prostate radiotherapy: are we underestimating the risks?

Jasmin Loh1, Katie Baker2, Swetha Sridharan3, Peter Greer4,5, Chris Wratten6, Anne Capp7, Sarah Gallagher8, Jarad Martin9.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The use of gold fiducial markers (FM) for prostate image-guided radiotherapy (IGRT) is standard practice. Published literature suggests low rates of serious infection following this procedure of 0-1.3%, but this may be an underestimate. We aim to report on the infection incidence and severity associated with the use of transrectally implanted intraprostatic gold FM.
METHODS: Three hundred and fifty-nine patients who underwent transrectal FM insertion between January 2012 and December 2013 were assessed retrospectively via a self-reported questionnaire. All had standard oral fluoroquinolone antibiotic prophylaxis. The patients were asked about infective symptoms and the treatment received including antibiotics and/or related hospital admissions. Potential infective events were confirmed through medical records.
RESULTS: 285 patients (79.4%) completed the questionnaire. 77 (27.0%) patients experienced increased urinary frequency and dysuria, and 33 patients (11.6%) reported episodes of chills and fevers after the procedure. 22 patients (7.7%) reported receiving antibiotics for urinary infection and eight patients (2.8%) reported hospital admission for urosepsis related to the procedure.
CONCLUSION: The overall rate of symptomatic infection with FM implantation in this study is 7.7%, with one third requiring hospital admission. This exceeds the reported rates in other FM implantation series, but is in keeping with the larger prostate biopsy literature. Given the higher than expected complication rate, a risk-adaptive approach may be helpful. Where higher accuracy is important such as stereotactic prostate radiotherapy, the benefits of FM may still outweigh the risks. For others, a non-invasive approach for prostate IGRT such as cone-beam CT could be considered.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 25890179      PMCID: PMC4333155          DOI: 10.1186/s13014-015-0347-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Radiat Oncol        ISSN: 1748-717X            Impact factor:   3.481


Background

Daily image guidance is a crucial component in the delivery of dose escalated external beam radiotherapy for prostate cancer. Image guided radiotherapy (IGRT) using gold fiducial markers is standard practice in many centres. Despite their adoption into routine practice, there is a lack of prospective evidence on the safety profile of the implantation of the fiducial markers. Most of the studies examining the complications of fiducial markers are done through a questionnaire, with the information collected retrospectively. These studies have reported low rates of infective complications with this procedure [1-4]. However there is a high degree of bias associated with survey studies. The results are dependent on a multitude of factors including the participant response rates, recall bias, the questions being asked and the time frame in which they are presented to the patient. There is a large and often prospectively collated literature relating to the septic complications associated with transrectal prostate biopsies and the potential risk factors [5-10]. Given the similarity between this procedure and the fiducial marker implantation with both being performed under transrectal ultrasound (TRUS) guidance, it is likely that we can draw some inferences from the results of the more mature prostate biopsies dataset. These suggest a rate of urosepsis of approximately 3% and an increasing incidence of multidrug resistant infections [7]. This has been used to promote alternative approaches such as transperineal biopsy. Apart from the potential complications related to the procedure, the fiducial markers do incur some financial cost. With non-invasive methods such as cone beam CT (CBCT) and 3D ultrasound of the prostate emerging as alternative tools for IGRT it is important to assess the safety of using transrectally implanted fiducial markers. Therefore the aim of our study was to evaluate the rate of infection from transrectal fiducial marker implantation for prostate IGRT whilst also minimizing the biases which can affect studies of this nature.

Methods

All patients at our centre who underwent gold seed fiducial marker implantation for prostate IGRT between January 2012 to December 2013 were identified through a local prospectively maintained database. The patients had the procedure done by their local urologists. All patients were prescribed prophylactic fluoroquinolone antibiotics peri-procedure, and rectal enemas were not always used. Under local anaesthetic, three gold markers of 1.0x3.0 mm each were implanted into the prostate base, apex and contralateral midzone with TRUS guidance. Our primary endpoint was the rate of urosepsis requiring hospital admission, with a secondary endpoint as the rate of urinary tract infection. This study received approval from a local human research ethics committee, the Hunter New England Human Research Ethics Committee (HREC Reference no: 14/02/19/5/09).

Questionnaire outline

Questionnaires were sent by post in mid-March 2014. This was followed-up with a phone call reminder if a reply had not been received at 3 weeks. The questionnaire was 1-page long consisting of 5 questions (Additional file 1) directed at infective symptoms and any related treatment received including antibiotics and/or hospital admissions following the procedure. Each question required a “Yes” or “No” answer, mirroring the approach of one of the largest previous reports [1]. There was also space for free text comments, and many of the respondents took up this option. All responses were collected and entered into a database. For those that answered yes to receiving antibiotic and/or hospital admissions, we corroborated the information with their medical records and also with their general practitioners where required. A consensus panel then reviewed the medical information of these patients, and where it was clear that the hospital admission was not related to the fiducial marker procedure, the patient was excluded from the analysis. Descriptive statistics were prepared to summarize the data using Excel (Microsoft, Seattle).

Results

A total of 359 patients were identified from our database and questionnaires were sent out to all of these patients’ last recorded address. We received 297 responses (82.7%), of which 12 declined participation. The final reply was received approximately 6 weeks after mail out. Therefore 285 (79.4%) completed questionnaires were returned. Seventy-seven (27.0%) men reported experiencing symptoms of increased urinary frequency or dysuria and 33 (11.6%) men experienced episodes of chills and fever after the procedure. Twenty-two (7.7%) men answered yes when asked if they were treated for a urinary infection with antibiotics after the procedure. For 16 of the 22 patients we were able verify this through their medical records and therefore at the minimum, the rate of infectious complication requiring antibiotic treatment in our study is 5.6%. Eight (2.8%) patients reported a hospital admission for infective complications related to the fiducial implantation procedure. We were able to obtain medical records of the hospital admission for 5 of the 8 patients. Therefore the minimum rate of hospital admission for infective complications in our study is 1.8%. All 5 patients presented within 5 days of the procedure and one patient required 2 hospital admissions for persistent infection. One of the 8 patients had urosepsis after his initial TRUS biopsy, but we were not able to verify if he had a hospital admission following his fiducial marker procedure. Twelve (4.2%) patients reported recurrent urinary infections requiring antibiotics. Three of the twelve patients developed chronic prostatitis at 7 to 12 months after completion of their radiotherapy requiring prolonged courses of antibiotics. E.Coli was the most common organism grown in those with a positive urine culture, although we were not able to obtain information on the sensitivities to fluoroquinolones for all of them. Other organisms isolated include enterococcus and proteus mirabilis.

Discussion

Although fiducial markers have been widely accepted as standard for prostate IGRT, there is a lack of quality evidence relating to their safety. Studies evaluating the safety of the implantation of the fiducial markers are all single arm case series, with significant heterogeneity across the studies (Table 1) [1-4]. Several factors may explain the higher rate of hospital admissions reported in our study (1.8-2.8%) compared to the published literature of between 0 to 1.3%. Similarly, the rate of urinary infections requiring antibiotic therapy in our series at 5.6 to 7.7% is higher compared to reported rates in the literature (1.9-2.2%). These studies all evaluated the toxicities and complications through the use of a questionnaire. This relies heavily on the patients’ accurate recollection of symptoms and events. The accuracy decreases as the recall period increases. This can lead to over or under-reporting. In our study, we chose to include patients who underwent this procedure within the last 2 years to minimise the possibility of recall bias. Most of the published studies also asked about a broad range of symptoms and toxicities. Different scales and scoring systems were employed in the studies. In one study, the questionnaire was up to 10 pages long. This increases the non-response rate and can further compound the recall bias. We chose to limit our questionnaire to a single page, directed only to the infective complications. We were also able to validate the patient reported infectious complications and the treatment received from their medical records for the majority of patients in our study. For these reasons, it is possible previous series have underestimated the true incidence of infective complications associated with TRUS guided gold fiducial insertion. Nonetheless, our study being retrospective is likely to still suffer from similar limitations of other studies of this nature (Table 1), with the possibility of under or overestimating the complications.
Table 1

Studies assessing complication rates from fiducial marker implantation for prostate image guided radiotherapy

Study Patient numbers Infective complications
Gill et al. [1]2343 patients (1.3%) required admission for sepsis
1 patient (0.4%) had Grade 4 septicaemia.
Langenhuijsen et al. [2]2094 patients (1.9%) with fever received additional antibiotics.
There were no hospital admissions.
Igdem et al. [3]1353 patients (2.2%) developed symptomatic urinary infection with fever and received antibiotics.
There were no hospital admissions.
1 (0.7%) patient developed asymptomatic bacteriuria resistant to antibiotic therapy.
Moman et al. [4]402 had transrectal FM implantation2 (0.5%) developed urosepsis (Grade 3 toxicity)
512 had transperineal FM implantationNo grade 3 or 4 toxicity.
Loh et al. 28522 patients (7.7%) received antibiotic treatment for a urinary infection
8 patients (2.8%) required hospital admission for urosepsis.
TRUS biopsy series
Wagenlehner et al. [10]5215.2% had symptomatic urinary tract infection
3.1% required hospital admissions for infectious complications

FM = fiducial marker.

TRUS = Transrectal ultrasound guided.

Studies assessing complication rates from fiducial marker implantation for prostate image guided radiotherapy FM = fiducial marker. TRUS = Transrectal ultrasound guided. There is more significant data on infectious complications available in the transrectal prostate biopsy setting. The rate of symptomatic and febrile urinary infections following transrectal prostate biopsy in large multi-institutional studies is approximately 4%, leading to hospital admission in up to 3.1% of patients [7]. Although local factors in gold seed implantation may have had an impact on the higher infection rates we report compared to other similar series, we note that our results are comparable to this transrectal biopsy data. Potential risk factors for post-biopsy infections have been identified in a number of studies [6,8-10]. They include a high comorbidity index, exposure to antibiotics within 6 months of biopsy, hospital employment and recent international travel. The presence of fluoroquinolone resistant organisms in the faecal reservoir is a significant risk factor for post biopsy infection [5,11,12]. Fluoroquinolone resistant bacteria have been detected in about 50-90% of cases with post-TRUS biopsy infections, with emerging reports of multidrug resistance. Currently the American Urological Association best practice guidelines still recommend fluoroquinolones or 1st-3rd generation cephalosporins as antimicrobials of choice for prophylaxis. The guidelines call for the use of an alternative anti-microbial in patients with risk factors for infectious complications following prostate biopsy. However, the regular use of broad-spectrum antibiotics is not the ideal solution, as this will possibly lead to even more resistance. The use of rectal enemas before biopsy is under investigation, although studies have so far not shown significantly reduced infection rates [13,14]. Pre-procedural rectal swabs to guide prophylactic antibiotic therapy have shown promising early results [15]. Transperineal prostate biopsy is also being explored as a method to avoid inoculation of rectal flora into the prostate. Data suggests a negligible rate of sepsis with this approach, although a general anaesthetic is often required [16]. It would seem prudent to incorporate some of these observations into the evolving understanding of fiducial marker placement. There is a paucity of evidence and guidelines to identify individuals at risk and the prevention of infectious complications following fiducial marker implantation. Given the similarity of the two procedures, current strategies have been adopted from the transrectal prostate biopsy setting. Evidence shows that in men with prostate cancer on active surveillance, serial repeat prostate biopsies are associated with a significant risk of infectious complications [17]. For every previous biopsy the odds of an infection increased 1.3 times [17]. There is no data currently to show the same with fiducial marker implantation following an initial prostate biopsy, but given the similarity of the procedures, the prostate biopsy data may also hold true in this setting. It is also not known if the acquired infections post fiducial marker implantation are more difficult to treat and harder to eradicate, as unlike the post biopsy setting, the fiducial markers could potentially serve as an enduring nidus of infection within the prostate. One patient in our study who grew a fluoroquinolone resistant E.Coli required 2 hospital admissions and long-term antibiotics for persistent infection. He eventually required a trans-urethral resection of necrotic prostate tissue, which is likely to have been a consequence of his chronic infections rather than solely due to his radiotherapy. Transperineal fiducial marker implantation may lead to less infective complications although there is still a risk of bleeding and pain. Chronic prostatitis following fiducial marker implantation is not easily recognisable in a clinical setting. It is a diagnosis of exclusion, with sterile pyuria often seen in these patients. The prolonged symptoms can impact on the patient’s quality of life. There is scarce literature on chronic prostatitis in this setting, likely reflecting the under-recognition of the condition in clinical practice and the difficulties in establishing a definitive diagnosis. There are costs to both the health provider and to the patients associated with this procedure. In Australia, the minimum cost for fiducial marker implantation is just over three hundred dollars per patient. This is excluding the cost of the fiducial markers themselves which is approximately one hundred and seventy dollars. The cost also increases if the patient requires general anaesthetic. For the patient, the procedure requires an extra appointment and if pre procedural infection screening becomes routine, this will add to the number of visits. In some cases co-ordination of the temporary cessation of their anti-coagulation therapy is also required. One patient in our study suffered a stroke as a consequence of subtherapeutic warfarin levels following recommencement after his procedure. Although this event is uncommon, the consequences for the patient when it occurs can be disastrous. For patients who had developed a complication following their prostate biopsy, this exposes them again to another potential risk of complication. The superiority of fiducial markers versus bony landmark based IGRT in prostate motion management is widely accepted [18]. The use of daily fiducial marker based IGRT is also associated with lower rates of patient reported rectal toxicity compared to a cohort managed with bony matching [19]. Non-invasive methods to localize the prostate gland such as 3D ultrasound [20] and CBCT [21] with soft tissue matching have been assessed as alternate tools for image guidance. A study comparing soft tissue matching using CBCT versus orthogonal megavoltage image matching with fiducial markers showed that in less than 5% of fractions a disagreement of >5mm was observed. The authors hypothesized that the most extreme differences in the shifts were likely due to higher interobserver variability in locating the prostate on CBCT images [21]. A second series also demonstrated higher interobserver variability with CBCT soft tissue matching compared with fiducial markers, and recommended that this should be taken into consideration in the margin generation [22]. Nonetheless, intraprostatic fiducials do allow greater accuracy of IGRT compared with soft-tissue based guidance with CBCT or ultrasound. As a consequence of this, one possibility may be to use fiducial markers mainly where higher accuracy is important such as stereotactic prostate radiotherapy, and CBCT in situations such as history of urosepsis following biopsy or anticoagulation. Such risk adaption of the method of IGRT would potentially reflect the wider movement towards tailored treatments in oncology.

Conclusion

Fiducial marker implantation for prostate IGRT is associated with a small percentage of patients experiencing moderate to severe complications requiring further medical interventions. However, the methods used to assess for toxicities are insufficient to adequately capture complications such as chronic prostatitis. Alternative non-invasive methods for image guidance such as CBCT and ultrasound might be considered for conventionally fractionated prostate radiotherapy.
  21 in total

1.  Fluoroquinolone-resistant E. coli in intestinal flora of patients undergoing transrectal ultrasound-guided prostate biopsy--should we reassess our practices for antibiotic prophylaxis?

Authors:  D Steensels; K Slabbaert; L De Wever; P Vermeersch; H Van Poppel; J Verhaegen
Journal:  Clin Microbiol Infect       Date:  2011-09-29       Impact factor: 8.067

2.  Transrectal ultrasound guided biopsy of the prostate. Do enemas decrease clinically significant complications?

Authors:  J M Carey; H J Korman
Journal:  J Urol       Date:  2001-07       Impact factor: 7.450

3.  Critical assessment of intramodality 3D ultrasound imaging for prostate IGRT compared to fiducial markers.

Authors:  Skadi van der Meer; Esther Bloemen-van Gurp; Jolanda Hermans; Robert Voncken; Denys Heuvelmans; Carol Gubbels; Davide Fontanarosa; Peter Visser; Ludy Lutgens; Francis van Gils; Frank Verhaegen
Journal:  Med Phys       Date:  2013-07       Impact factor: 4.071

4.  The impact of repeat biopsies on infectious complications in men with prostate cancer on active surveillance.

Authors:  Behfar Ehdaie; Emily Vertosick; Massimiliano Spaliviero; Anna Giallo-Uvino; Ying Taur; Maryellen O'Sullivan; Jennifer Livingston; Pramod Sogani; James Eastham; Peter Scardino; Karim Touijer
Journal:  J Urol       Date:  2013-09-07       Impact factor: 7.450

5.  Assessment of cone beam CT registration for prostate radiation therapy: fiducial marker and soft tissue methods.

Authors:  Timothy Deegan; Rebecca Owen; Tanya Holt; Andrew Fielding; Jennifer Biggs; Matthew Parfitt; Alicia Coates; Lisa Roberts
Journal:  J Med Imaging Radiat Oncol       Date:  2014-06-22       Impact factor: 1.735

Review 6.  Reducing infection rates after prostate biopsy.

Authors:  Florian M E Wagenlehner; Adrian Pilatz; Przemyslaw Waliszewski; Wolfgang Weidner; Truls E Bjerklund Johansen
Journal:  Nat Rev Urol       Date:  2014-01-14       Impact factor: 14.432

Review 7.  Sepsis and 'superbugs': should we favour the transperineal over the transrectal approach for prostate biopsy?

Authors:  Jeremy P Grummet; Mahesha Weerakoon; Sean Huang; Nathan Lawrentschuk; Mark Frydenberg; Daniel A Moon; Mary O'Reilly; Declan Murphy
Journal:  BJU Int       Date:  2014-02-19       Impact factor: 5.588

8.  Patient-reported complications from fiducial marker implantation for prostate image-guided radiotherapy.

Authors:  S Gill; J Li; J Thomas; M Bressel; K Thursky; C Styles; K H Tai; G M Duchesne; F Foroudi
Journal:  Br J Radiol       Date:  2012-01-17       Impact factor: 3.039

9.  Incidence of urinary tract infection following transrectal ultrasound guided prostate biopsy at a tertiary-care medical center in Lebanon.

Authors:  Zaher K Otrock; Gerard O Oghlakian; Mariana M Salamoun; Maurice Haddad; Abdul Rahman N Bizri
Journal:  Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol       Date:  2004-10       Impact factor: 3.254

10.  Treatment-related morbidity in prostate cancer: a comparison of 3-dimensional conformal radiation therapy with and without image guidance using implanted fiducial markers.

Authors:  Jasmeet Singh; Peter B Greer; Martin A White; Joel Parker; Jackie Patterson; Colin I Tang; Anne Capp; Christopher Wratten; James W Denham
Journal:  Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys       Date:  2012-10-03       Impact factor: 7.038

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1.  Transperineal gold marker implantation for image-guided external beam radiotherapy of prostate cancer : A single institution, prospective study.

Authors:  Kliton Jorgo; Péter Ágoston; Tibor Major; Zoltán Takácsi-Nagy; Csaba Polgár
Journal:  Strahlenther Onkol       Date:  2017-02-02       Impact factor: 3.621

2.  Fiducial markers implantation for prostate image-guided radiotherapy: a report on the transperineal approach.

Authors:  Luigi De Cicco; Stefano Bracelli
Journal:  Radiol Med       Date:  2018-10-25       Impact factor: 3.469

3.  Bacterial Urinary Tract Infection after Transrectal Placement of Fiducial Markers prior to Proton Radiotherapy for Prostate Cancer.

Authors:  William M Mendenhall; Gabriella Glassman; Christopher G Morris; Joseph A Costa; Christopher R Williams; Stephanie E Harris; Stephen E Mandia; Bradford S Hoppe; Randal H Henderson; Curtis M Bryant; R Charles Nichols; Nancy P Mendenhall
Journal:  Int J Part Ther       Date:  2016-08-29

4.  Prospective Monitoring and Adapting Strategies for Prevention of Infection Following Transrectal Prostate Procedures.

Authors:  Solomon L Woldu; Ryan C Hutchinson; Nirmish Singla; Brad Hornberger; Claus G Roehrborn; Yair Lotan
Journal:  Urol Pract       Date:  2017-03-18

5.  Linear EBUS-guided fiducial marker placement to guide radiotherapy for endobronchial, radiographically occult synchronous primary squamous cell carcinoma of the lung.

Authors:  David Maurice Chambers; Gregory John Pfister; Umair Ahmad Gauhar
Journal:  Respir Med Case Rep       Date:  2017-06-15

6.  Multiparametric prostate MRI-based intensity-modulated radiation therapy guided by prostatic calcifications.

Authors:  Johnny Kao; Pawel Karwowski; Jeffrey Pettit; Austin Kevin Barney; Christopher Atalla
Journal:  Br J Radiol       Date:  2020-08-26       Impact factor: 3.039

7.  Automatic localization of the prostatic urethra for image guided radiation therapy.

Authors:  Nicola J Nasser; Jonathan Klein; Eyal Fenig; Abed Agbarya
Journal:  Tech Innov Patient Support Radiat Oncol       Date:  2021-06-11

Review 8.  The Use of Ultrasound Imaging in the External Beam Radiotherapy Workflow of Prostate Cancer Patients.

Authors:  Saskia M Camps; Davide Fontanarosa; Peter H N de With; Frank Verhaegen; Ben G L Vanneste
Journal:  Biomed Res Int       Date:  2018-01-24       Impact factor: 3.411

9.  The impact of the three degrees-of-freedom fiducial marker-based setup compared to soft tissue-based setup in hypofractionated intensity-modulated radiotherapy for prostate cancer.

Authors:  Satoshi Tanabe; Satoru Utsunomiya; Eisuke Abe; Hiraku Sato; Atsushi Ohta; Hironori Sakai; Takumi Yamada; Motoki Kaidu; Hidefumi Aoyama
Journal:  J Appl Clin Med Phys       Date:  2019-05-04       Impact factor: 2.102

10.  Observer uncertainties of soft tissue-based patient positioning in IGRT.

Authors:  Taka-Aki Hirose; Hidetaka Arimura; Jun-Ichi Fukunaga; Saiji Ohga; Tadamasa Yoshitake; Yoshiyuki Shioyama
Journal:  J Appl Clin Med Phys       Date:  2020-01-20       Impact factor: 2.102

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