| Literature DB >> 31139841 |
Andreas Schörghofer1, Michael Groher1, Josef Karner1, Andrea Kopp1, Gerhard Kametriser1, Thomas Kunit2, Josef Holzinger3, Felix Sedlmayer1, Frank Wolf4.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Prostate cancer (PCA) is highly heterogeneous in terms of its oncologic outcome. We therefore aimed to tailor radiation treatment to the risk status by using three different hypofractionated radiation regimen differing in applied dose, use of rectum spacer, inclusion of pelvic lymph nodes (pLN) and use of androgen deprivation therapy (ADT). Here we report on acute toxicity, quality of life (QOL) and oncologic outcome at a median follow-up of 12 months.Entities:
Keywords: Dose escalation; Hypofractionation; Pelvic lymph nodes; Risk stratification; Spacer
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31139841 PMCID: PMC6763405 DOI: 10.1007/s00066-019-01477-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Strahlenther Onkol ISSN: 0179-7158 Impact factor: 3.621
Treatment regimen overview
| Fractionation | EQD2α/β1.5 | Spacer | AD | Technique | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 20 × 3/21 × 3a | 77.1 Gy/81 Gy | No/yesa | No | No | 7-field IMRT |
|
| 21 × 3 | 81 Gy | Yes | No | 6 months | 7-field IMRT |
|
| 25 × 2.7/2.4/2 P/SV/pLN | 81/66.9/50 Gy P/SV/pLN | Yes | Yes | 24 months | VMAT dual arc |
a31 patients treated before November 2016
Vienna Rectoscopy Score (VRS)
| VRS | Congested mucosa | Telangiectasia | Ulceration | Stricture | Necrosis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Score 0 | Grade 1 | None | None | None | None |
| Score 1 | Grade 2 | Grade 1 | None | None | None |
| Score 2 | Grade 3 | Grade 2 | None | None | None |
| Score 3 | Any | Grade 3 | Grade 1 | None | None |
| Score 4 | Any | Any | Grade 2 | Grade 1 | None |
| Score 5 | Any | Any | Grade ≥3 | Grade ≥2 | Any |
Patient characteristics
|
| % | |
|---|---|---|
| Number of patients | 221 | – |
| Age (mean) | 75 | – |
| Neoadjuvant hormonal therapy | 149 | 67 |
| T stage | ||
| T1a | 2 | 1 |
| T1b | 1 | 0 |
| T1c | 120 | 54 |
| T2 | 15 | 7 |
| T2a | 19 | 9 |
| T2b | 10 | 5 |
| T2c | 16 | 7 |
| T3 | 6 | 3 |
| T3a | 1 | 0 |
| T3b | 1 | 0 |
| T4 | 1 | 0 |
| PSA concentration (ng/mL) | ||
| <10 | 130 | 59 |
| 10–20 | 67 | 30 |
| >20 | 24 | 11 |
| Gleason score | ||
| ≤6 | 108 | 49 |
| 7 | 64 | 29 |
| ≥8 | 38 | 17 |
| Risk group | ||
| Low | 64 | 29 |
| Intermediate | 96 | 43 |
| High | 61 | 28 |
PSA prostate-specific antigen
Fig. 1Acute toxicity. Shown are Vienna Rectoscopy Scores (a), IPSS scores (b) and acute CTC toxicity for the urogenital (c) and gastrointestinal (d) domain for the low risk (LR), intermediate risk (IR) and high risk (HR) regimen, respectively. * = p ≤ 0.05, ** = p ≤ 0.01, *** = p ≤ 0.001
Fig. 2Quality of life scores for the urinary (a), bowel (b), hormonal treatment-related symptoms (c) and sexual functioning (d) domains. RT radiotherapy, mos months; LR low risk, IR intermediate risk, HR high risk. * = p ≤ 0.05, ** = p ≤ 0.01, *** = p ≤ 0.001
Fig. 3Biochemical control. Kaplan–Meier analysis of biochemichal progression-free survival (a) and average PSA values (b) for LR, IR and HR patients