| Literature DB >> 33881557 |
Jost von Hardenberg1, Hannes Cash2,3,4, Daniel Koch5, Angelika Borkowetz6, Johannes Bruendl7, Sami-Ramzi Leyh-Bannurah8, Timur H Kuru9, Karl-Friedrich Kowalewski10, Daniel Schindele4, Katharina S Mala2, Niklas Westhoff10, Andreas Blana5, Martin Schostak4.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Due to the tissue preserving approach of focal therapy (FT), local cancer relapse can occur. Uncertainty exists regarding triggers and outcome of salvage strategies.Entities:
Keywords: Focal therapy; Hemi-ablation; High-intensity focused ultrasound; Multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging; Partial gland ablation; Prostate neoplasms; Salvage therapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33881557 PMCID: PMC8519844 DOI: 10.1007/s00345-021-03700-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Urol ISSN: 0724-4983 Impact factor: 4.226
Patient characteristics and perioperative data
| Variable | S-RP | AS | S-RT |
|---|---|---|---|
| Value | |||
| Mean ± SD age at cancer relapse or salvage therapy (ST) | 65.1 ± 8.0 | 68.2 ± 7.6 | 73.9 ± 7.2 |
| Median PSA ng/ml at cancer relapse or ST (IQR) | 5.7 (3.8–9.1) | 3.48 (2.1–5.4) | 8.6 (5.2–11.9) |
| No. biopsy strategy at cancer relapse (%) | |||
| Systematic only | 4 (9.1) | 7 (14) | 1 (7.7) |
| Targeted only | 4 (9.1) | 1 (2) | – |
| Combined systematic and targeted | 32 (72.7) | 42 (84) | 11 (84.6) |
| No. ISUP GG at cancer relapse (%) | |||
| GG 1 | 17 (38.6) | 42 (84) | 4 (30.8) |
| GG 2 | 10 (22.7) | 5 (10) | 4 (30.8) |
| GG ≥ 3 | 17 (38.6) | 3 (6) | 4 (30.8) |
| Median % sys biopsy cores pos at cancer relapse (IQR) | 16.7 (9.6–35) | 8.7 (8.3–16.7) | 23.3 (8.3–36.1) |
| Median max. infiltration (%) of cores (IQR) at cancer relapse | 30 (17.5–52.5) | 15 (10–30) | 30 (17.5–62.5) |
| No. PI-RADS at cancer relapse (%) | |||
| PI-RADS 3 | 2 (4.5) | 3 (6) | – |
| PI-RADS 4–5 | 19 (43.2) | 14 (28) | 1 (7.7) |
| Suspicious, no PI-RADS | 1 (2.3) | 4 (8) | – |
| Not suspicious | 16 (36.4) | 29 (58) | 11 (84.6) |
| No. focal therapy (FT) energy source | |||
| High-intensity focused ultrasound | 42 (95.5) | 50 (100) | 13 (100) |
| Vascular targeted therapy | 2 (4.5) | – | – |
| No. previous FT strategy (%) | |||
| Focal | 25 (56.8) | 35 (70) | 11 (84.6) |
| Hemi-ablation | 14 (31.8) | 11 (22) | 1 (7.7) |
| Focal strategy other/unknown | 5 (11.4) | 4 (8) | 1 (7.7) |
| Median PSA change (%) from FT to nadir (IQR) | − 47.5 (− 62.2 to 27.6) | − 58.5 (− 75.8 to 40.7) | − 54.0 (− 87.1 to 41.0) |
| Median PSA change (%) from FT to cancer relapse or ST (IQR) | − 20.6 (− 38.7 to 0.5) | − 50.1 (− 70.0 to − 34.2) | 18.8 (− 24.2 to 55.9) |
| Median PSA change (%) from nadir to cancer relapse or ST (IQR) | 40.1 (13.3 to 103.4) | 19.1 (0 to 38.6) | 125.0 (52.8 to 571) |
| Median months from FT to cancer relapse (IQR) | 11 (8.75–17) | 12 (11–15) | 12 (12–14.5) |
| Median months follow-up after cancer relapse (IQR) | 28 (15 to 44.5) | 19 (8.3 to 36) | 34.5 (26.3 to 46.3) |
Fig. 1PSA changes as trigger for salvage therapy after cancer relapse. *p ≤ 0.05. ns not significant
Fig. 2a Adverse pathological findings on S-RP, b Sankey diagram emphasizes proportions of ISUP changes between biopsy at relapse compared to S-RP specimen
Fig. 3Kaplan–Meier estimates of a patients experiencing progression after salvage radical prostatectomy (S-RP) and salvage radiotherapy (S-RT), b patients under active survaillance with secondary-therapy during the follow-up period. c metastasis-free survival in the whole cohort. One patient in the S-RP group with no BCR and a follow-up of 98 months is not shown in a and c