| Literature DB >> 32840655 |
S Vaggers1, B P Rai2, E C P Chedgy1, A de la Taille3, B K Somani4.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Radiation dose to the rectum in prostate brachytherapy (PBT) can be reduced by the use of polyethylene glycol (PEG) hydrogel spacers. This reduces the rate of rectal toxicity and allows dose escalation to the prostate. Our objectives were to provide an overview of technique for injection of a PEG hydrogel spacer, reduction in rectal dosimetry, gastrointestinal toxicity and potential complications.Entities:
Keywords: Brachytherapy; Cancer; DuraSeal; Prostate; Radiotherapy; Rectal spacer; SpaceOAR
Year: 2020 PMID: 32840655 PMCID: PMC8217059 DOI: 10.1007/s00345-020-03414-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Urol ISSN: 0724-4983 Impact factor: 4.226
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram to demonstrate screening process for included and excluded papers
Summary of characteristics and results of studies included in the systematic review including treatment technique, spacer type, mean separation and acute and late GI complications
| First author (year) | Treatment technique | No. of patients | Spacer type | Median follow up time | Mean separation (mm) | Rectal dosimetric reduction (spacer vs. non spacer)/ (percentage dose reduction) | Complication scoring system | Acute GI toxicity (spacer vs. non spacer) | Late GI toxicity (spacer vs. non spacer) | Failure rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mahal et al. [ | Salvage LDR-BT; prior pelvic irradiation | 11 | DuraSeal | 15.7 | 10.9 in patients with prior BT and 7.7 in patients with prior EBRT | Median V75% (cc): 0.07 | EPIC-CP questionnaire | Grade 1: 0% Grade 2: 9% (fistula) | Grade 1 or 2: 36% Grade 3 or 4: 9% 1 case of prostatorectal fistula requiring a diverting colostomy and an interposition rotational gracilis muscle flap | 27.2% |
| Heikkilä et al. [ | LDR-BT | 10 | DuraSeal | – | 10 | Rectal D2 cc 64 ± 13 Gy vs. 95 ± 13 Gy ( | – | One patient reported a sensation of pressure in the rectum One patient felt a sudden need for defecation | – | 0% |
| Wu et al. [ | HDR-BT; HDR-BT + EBRT; Salvage HDR-BT | 18 with gel; 36 without gel | SpaceOAR | – | – | Median V75% (cc): < 0.005 vs. 0.12 ( | – | One patient developed a rectal abscess | – | 0% |
| Chao et al. [ | HDR-BT + EBRT | 30 with gel; 65 without gel | SpaceOAR | 58 | – | Median V75% (cc) 0.0 (0–0.22) vs. 0.45 (0–1.46) ( | NCICTCAE v4.0 | Grade 1: 13.3% vs. 30.8% ( Grade 2 0% vs. 1.5% ( | Grade 1 0% vs. 7.7% ( | – |
| Chao et al. [ | HDR-BT + EBRT | 32 with gel and 65 without gel | SpaceOAR | 60 | 10 | Median V75% (cc) 0.0 vs. 0.45 ( | NCICTCAE v4.0 | Grade 1 12.5% vs. 30.8% ( | Grade 1: 0% vs. 7.7% ( | – |
| Strom et al. 2014 [ | HDR-BT ± IMRT | 100 with gel; 100 without gel | DuraSeal | 8.7 | 12 | Rectal D2 cc 47 ± 9% vs. 60 ± 8% ( | – | – | – | 0% |
| Yeh et al. [ | HDR-BT + IMRT | 326 | DuraSeal | 16 | 16 | Maximum dose to rectum 78% vs. 95% (SD = 11.9%)/(17.3%) | NCICTCAE v4.0 | Grade 1: 37.4% Grade 2: 2.8% Most commonly diarrhoea | Grade 1:12.7% Grade 2: 1.4% Grade 3: 0.7% 1 case of severe proctitis One case of fistula and necrotising fasciitis requiring a diverting colostomy | – |
| Taggar et al. [ | LDR-BT; LDR-BT + EBRT; Salvage LDR-BT | 74 with gel; 136 without gel | SpaceOAR | 6 | 11.2 | Rectal D2 cc 20.47% vs. 43.16% ( | RTOG | Diarrhoea: LDR alone 7.7% vs. 15.9% LDR + EBRT 12.5% vs. 4.1% Salvage 12.5% vs. 5.3% Proctitis: LDR alone 0% vs. 0%, LDR + EBRT 0% vs. 5.5% Salvage 0% vs. 0% No grade ¾ complications | – | 6.8% |
| Morita et al. [ | LDR-BT; LDR-BT + ERBT | 100 with gel; 200 without gel | SpaceOAR | – | 11.6 | Median V100% 0.026 ± 0.14 vs. 0.318 + /1 0.34 ( | – | – | – | 4% |
LDR low dose rate; HDR high dose rate; BT brachytherapy; ERBT external beam radiotherapy; IMRT intensity modulated radiotherapy; VMAT volumetric modulated radiotherapy; GI gastrointestinal; EPIC-CP Expanded Prostate Cancer Index Composite for Clinical Practice; RTOG Radiation Therapy Oncology Group; National Cancer Institute Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events v. 4.0 grading system
Fig. 2Flow diagram to demonstrate steps for insertion of PEG hydrogel spacers
Tips and tricks of overcoming failure with the procedure
| Failure | Overcoming the problem |
|---|---|
| Air bubbles | Remove all air bubbles from the endocavity balloon before starting Prime the needle with saline [ |
| Premature coagulation/ needle plugging | DuraSeal can be diluted 1:1 in normal saline to reduce the speed of coagulation [ Do not prime the SpaceOAR applicator [ Inject SpaceOAR in one continuous movement [ |
| Failure to hydrodissect | Caution in patients with prior radiotherapy, TURP, cryotherapy or prostatectomy [ Start with small 1 ml injections to confirm in the correct place and ease of dissection [ If significant resistance, abandon procedure [ |
| Unfamiliarity with the procedure | This procedure requires familiarity with training and experience in transperineal interventional procedures Trial this with patients under general anaesthetic [ |
Comparison of DuraSeal and SpaceOAR
| DuraSeal | SpaceOAR | |
|---|---|---|
| Manufacturer | Covidien | Boston Scientific |
| Approval | Off label (approved for use in spinal surgery) [ | FDA approval and CE marked [ |
| Number of studies in this review using this spacer | 4 | 5 |
| Polymerisation time | 4 s [ | 10 s [ |
| Spacer half-life | 4–6 weeks [ | 3 months [ |
| Excretion | Renal [ | Renal [ |
| Cost | £250 (€300) [ | £1250 (€1500) [ |
Potential complications from rectal spacer injection
| Mild | Moderate | Severe |
|---|---|---|
| Sensation of rectal fullness/ pain [ | Infection, e.g., prostatitis/ rectal abscess [ | Systemic embolism if air/ gel injected intravenously [ |
| Tenesmus [ | Rectal ulcers [ | Fistula requiring colostomy/ urostomy [ |
| Diarrhoea [ | Anaphylaxis [ |