| Literature DB >> 34195499 |
Mark F McLaughlin1, Michael R Folkert1, Robert D Timmerman1, Raquibul Hannan1, Aurelie Garant1, Steven J Hudak2, Daniel N Costa3, Neil B Desai1.
Abstract
The risk of rectal toxicity during and after prostate cancer radiation therapy is common to all treatment regimens. Hydrogel rectal spacers are increasingly being used to mitigate this risk and to facilitate dose-escalation, but also may infiltrate the rectal wall, with unclear clinical implication. We present a case of significant infiltration associated with severe late rectal injury (grade 4) and further grade 3 to 4 sequelae (recto-urethral fistula and associated osteomyelitis requiring exenteration) after high-dose stereotactic body radiation therapy for localized prostate cancer. The injury's temporal pattern associated with the expected timing of gel dissolution and displacement of infiltrated rectal layers potentially toward high dose regions together suggest a contributing role of the infiltration to the injury. In light of the rapid increase of hydrogel rectal spacer utilization, we review the case's evolution, concerning imaging findings, and associated literature and make suggestions regarding treatment planning and endoscopic assessment in the setting of infiltration or expected injury.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34195499 PMCID: PMC8239444 DOI: 10.1016/j.adro.2021.100713
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Radiat Oncol ISSN: 2452-1094
Fig. 1Sagittal (A) and axial (B) T2-weighted treatment planning magnetic resonance imaging show infiltration of hydrogel within the rectal wall with delamination and discontinuity of the muscularis propria (arrows) resulting in accumulation of spacer material in the submucosa (arrowheads).
Comparison of rectal dose constraints in NRG GU005 to dosimetric values achieved in the presented treatment
| Rectal dose volume | NRG GU005 (Gy) | Case (Gy) |
|---|---|---|
| Point Dose | <38.06 | 43.9 |
| D3cc | <34.4 | 32.2 |
| D10% | <29 | 21.2 |
| D20% | <29 | 17.4 |
| D50% | <18.13 | 2.0 |
Fig. 2Clockwise from top left: (A) shows axial dose distribution on fused magnetic resonance imaging with sparing of rectal wall, <35% of circumference receiving 39 Gy (cyan) and <50% of circumference receiving 24 Gy (blue). (B) Shows similar rectal wall sparing in sagittal view. (C) Shows dose volume histogram with doses to the planning target volume (red), urethra (green), spacer infiltration (magenta), rectum (brown), and bladder (yellow).
Fig. 3Sagittal (A) and axial (B) follow-up contrast-enhanced computed tomography images at 7 months posttreatment blended with pretreatment magnetic resonance imaging depict a large defect in the lower anterior rectal wall corresponding to the abnormal area shown in Fig. 1A. This results in free communication between the rectal lumen and the air-filled rectoprostatic space, in keeping with the wall defect identified on sigmoidoscopy (C).
Fig. 4Oblique lateral radiograph obtained during retrograde urethrogram reveals normal penile and bulbar segments of the anterior urethra (white arrows) but fistulous communication (yellow arrowheads) between the membranous urethra and the rectum (R). Abbreviations: P = prostate; R = rectal wall.
Summary of high-grade complications associated with hydrogel spacer in the treatment of prostate cancer
| Date of report | Grade | Description | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 12/5/14 | 3 | Ulceration treated conservatively | Received LDR brachytherapy, symptoms began 1 month after placement |
| 1/19/16 | 3 | Proctitis requiring colostomy | Symptoms started 6 months after placement |
| 10/24/17 | 3 | Rectourethral fistula requiring colostomy | High-risk posterior cancer with extraprostatic extension, stepper not used |
| 4/1/18 | 3 | Rectourethral fistula requiring colostomy | Two patients with HDR treatment, fistula “several months” after placement |
| 6/4/18 | 3 | Perirectal fistula requiring surgery | Spacer eroded through rectal wall before radiation, poor rectal preparation |
| 9/29/18 | 3 | Ulceration after rectal wall injection | Radiation not given |
| 1/2/19 | 3 | Rectourethral fistula requiring colostomy | Rectal wall infiltration was present |
| 2/21/19 | 3 | Rectourethral fistula requiring colostomy | Rectal muscle infiltration seen |
| 4/8/19 | 3 | Rectal ulcer resolved with HBO therapy | High dose IMRT, acute ulceration associated with pseudolumen abutting rectal wall |
| Present report | 4 | Rectourethral fistula and associated osteomyelitis ultimately requiring exenteration | Anterior rectal wall infiltration was present, high dose SAbR delivered, symptoms began 5 months after treatment, rectal ulcer was instrumented, symptoms initially improved with HBO but later developed fistula, abscess, and osteomyelitis |
Abbreviations: HDR = high dose rate; IMRT = intensity-modulated radiation therapy; LDR = low dose rate; SabR = stereotactic ablative radiation therapy.