| Literature DB >> 34430417 |
Andrew T Tracey1, Lucas M Nogueira1, Ricardo G Alvim1, Jonathan A Coleman1, Katie S Murray2.
Abstract
Despite innovations in surgical technology and advancements in radiation therapy, radical treatments for clinically localized prostate cancer are associated with significant patient morbidity, including both urinary and sexual dysfunction. This has created a vital need for therapies and management strategies that provide an acceptable degree of oncologic efficacy while mitigating these undesirable side effects. Successful developments in screening approaches and advances in prostate imaging have allowed clinicians to identify, localize, and more precisely target early cancers. This has afforded urologists with an important opportunity to develop and employ focal ablation techniques that selectively destroy tumors while preserving the remainder of the gland, thus avoiding detrimental treatment effects to surrounding sensitive structures. A lack of high-level evidence supporting such an approach had previously hindered widespread adoption of focal treatments, but there are now numerous published clinical trials which have sought to establish benchmarks for safety and efficacy. As the clinical evidence supporting a potential role in prostate cancer treatment begins to accumulate, there has been a growing acceptance of focal therapy in the urologic oncology community. In this narrative review article, we describe the techniques, advantages, and side effect profiles of the most commonly utilized focal ablative techniques and analyze published clinical trial data supporting their evolving role in the prostate cancer treatment paradigm. 2021 Translational Andrology and Urology. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: Focal therapy; primary therapy; prostate cancer; salvage therapy
Year: 2021 PMID: 34430417 PMCID: PMC8350247 DOI: 10.21037/tau-20-1212
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Androl Urol ISSN: 2223-4683
Figure 1Clinical and pathologic criteria to be considered in the selection of candidate for focal ablative therapies.
Summary of significant studies evaluating focal ablation of prostate cancer
| Study | Design | Ablation modality | Patients | Grade group inclusion | MRI inclusion | Oncologic outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Shah | Prospective, multicenter | Cryotherapy | 122 | 90.2% GG2+ | MR-visible lesions only | No residual cancer in 79.5% of patients treated in index lesion |
| Ward | Retrospective multicenter registry | Cryotherapy | 1,160 | 27% GG2+ | n/a | 75.7% BCR-free survival at 36 months (14.1% underwent biopsy—26% were positive) |
| Guillaumier | Prospective, multicenter | HIFU | 625 | 72% GG2+ | MR-visible lesions | 88% freedom from radical/systemic therapy; 98% MFS (35.5% underwent biopsy) |
| Stabile | Prospective, multicenter | HIFU | 1,032 | 80.3% GG2+ | Baseline MRI in all patients | 81% freedom from radical treatment at 96 mos (41.1% underwent biopsy, 24.7% biopsy failure) |
| Rischmann | Prospective, multicenter | HIFU | 111 | 26% GG2+ | MR-visible lesions | 95% with no GG2+ disease in treated lobe |
| Azzouzi | Prospective, randomized VTP | PDT | 206 VTP | GG1 only | n/a | 28% disease progression in VTP group |
| Tracey | Prospective, single center | PDT | 51 | GG2 only | MR-visible lesions only | 82% absence of GG2 disease at 3-month biopsy |
| Murray | Prospective, single center | IRE | 25 | 28% GG2+ | MR-visible lesions only | 84% negative 6-month biopsy in ablation zone; 88% freedom from radical treatment |
| Ting | Prospective, single center | IRE | 25 | 92% GG2+ | MR-visible lesions only | No in-field recurrences on mpMRI or biopsy; significant cancer on biopsy in 24% at 8 months |
| van den Bos | Prospective, single center | IRE | 63 | 85.7% GG2+ | Baseline MRI in all patients | In-field recurrence rate of 16%, overall recurrence rate of 24% |
| Scheltema | Prospective, matched pairs | IRE | 50 IRE | 84% GG2+ | MR-visible lesions only | Significant cancer in 29.5% at 12-month biopsy |
| Walser | Prospective, single center | FLA | 120 | 69.2% GG2+ | MR-visible lesions only | 83% freedom from radical treatment at 1 year |
MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; BCR, biochemical recurrence; HIFU, high-intensity focused ultrasound; PDT, photodynamic therapy; IRE, irreversible electroporation; FLA, focal laser ablation; VTP, vascular-targeted photodynamic therapy; AS, active surveillance; mpMRI, multi-parametric magnetic resonance imaging; RARP, robot-assisted radical prostatectomy.
Retrospective studies evaluating efficacy and side effects of focal salvage therapies for radio-recurrent prostate cancer
| Study | Ablation modality | Patients | Erectile dysfunction | Urinary incontinence | Complications | Key oncologic outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bomers | Cryotherapy | 62 | Post-op potency preserved in 41% (15/37 pts) | 3.2% | Clavien 3+ in 2 pts (3.2%); rectovesical fistula in 1 pt | 83% disease-free survival at 6 months |
| Overduin | Cryotherapy | 47 | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not reported | “Local control” in 24/47 pts (51%) |
| Li | Cryotherapy | 91 | Post-op potency preserved in 50% | 5.5% | Rectourethral fistula in 3.3% | Biochemical failure in 53.5% at 5 years |
| de Castro Abreu | Cryotherapy | 25 | Post-op potency preserved in 2/7 pts (29%) | 0% | None | Biochemical failure in 32% (8/25) |
| Wenske | Cryotherapy | 55 | Not assessed | Not assessed | 4/55 pts with complications: rectal fistula in 3/55 (5.5%), BOO in 1/55 (1.8%) | 47% 5-year recurrence-free survival |
| Eisenberg and Shinohara (2008) ( | Cryotherapy | 19 | Not assessed | 7% (1/15 pts) | Urethral stricture (1 pt), urethral ulcer (1 pt) | Biochemical failure in 50% at 3 years |
| Kanthabalan | HIFU | 150 | Post-op potency preserved in 7/12 pts (58.3%) | Continence preserved in 87.5% at 2 years | BNC in 8%, rectourethral fistula in 2% | Biochemical failure in 51% at 3 years |
| Baco | HIFU | 48 | Mean decline in IIEF-5 of 4.2 points | 25% | Osteitis pubis in 2 patients | Progression-free survival in 52% at 2 years |
| Ahmed | HIFU | 39 | Mean decline in IIEF-5 of 5 points | 36% | Gr 3+ in 26%, rectourethral fistula in 3.6% | Biochemical failure in 58% at 3 years |
HIFU, high-intensity focused ultrasound; BOO, bladder outlet obstruction; IIEF, International Index of Erectile Function.