Literature DB >> 35158986

Narrative Review of the Post-Operative Management of Prostate Cancer Patients: Is It Really the End of Adjuvant Radiotherapy?

Vincent Bourbonne1, Olivier Pradier1, Ulrike Schick1.   

Abstract

Despite three randomized trials indicating a significant reduction in biochemical recurrence (BCR) in high-risk patients, adjuvant radiotherapy (aRT) was rarely performed, even in patients harboring high-risk features. aRT is associated with a higher risk of urinary incontinence and is often criticized for the lack of patient selection criteria. With a BCR rate reaching 30-70% in high-risk patients, a consensus between urologists and radiation oncologists was needed, leading to three different randomized trials challenging aRT with early salvage radiotherapy (eSRT). In these three different randomized trials with event-free survival as the primary outcome and a planned meta-analysis, eSRT appeared as non-inferior to aRT, answering, for some, this never-ending question. For many, however, the debate persists; these results raised several questions among urologists and radiation oncologists. BCR is thought to be a surrogate for clinically meaningful endpoints such as overall survival and cancer-specific survival but may be poorly efficient in comparison with metastasis-free survival. Imaging of rising prostate-specific antigen (PSA), post-operative persistent PSA and BCR was revolutionized by the broader use of MRI and nuclear imaging such as PET-PSMA; these imaging modalities were not analyzed in the previous randomized trials. A sub-group of very high-risk patients could possibly benefit from an adjuvant radiotherapy; but their usual risk factors such as high Gleason score or invaded surgical margins mean they are unable to be selected. More precise biomarkers of early BCR or even metastatic-relapse were developed in this setting and could be useful for the patients' stratification. In this review, we insist on the need for multidisciplinary discussions to fully comprehend the individual characteristics of each patient and propose the best treatment strategy for every patient.

Entities:  

Keywords:  adjuvant radiotherapy; biomarker; early salvage radiotherapy; personalized medicine

Year:  2022        PMID: 35158986      PMCID: PMC8833528          DOI: 10.3390/cancers14030719

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cancers (Basel)        ISSN: 2072-6694            Impact factor:   6.639


1. Introduction

Approximately 30% of operated on prostate cancer (PCa) patients will experience biochemical recurrence (BCR), this rising to 50–70% in very high-risk patients [1,2,3]. Since 2009–2012 and the publications of three randomized controlled trials [1,4,5] (RCTs) evaluating the benefit of adjuvant radiotherapy (aRT) in PCa patients with high-risk features, a gap has opened up between urologists/radiation oncologists who believed these three trials to be practice-changing and those who awaited confirmation of these results on more robust endpoints. Despite a significant benefit for biochemical-free recurrence (bRFS), the only trial in favor of a significant benefit on metastasis-free survival (MFS) and overall survival (OS) was criticized for its design [4]. These debates resulted in a low use of aRT, clinicians fearing the higher genitourinary morbidity associated with aRT when compared to salvage radiotherapy (SRT). The benefit on OS was difficult to evaluate in a population with an expected survival higher than the proposed follow-up. Given the possible lack of benefit on OS and its higher toxicity profile, aRT was challenged by early SRT (eSRT) in three recently published RCTs [6,7,8] pooled in a pre-planned meta-analysis [9] that proved eSRT to be non-inferior to aRT when considering event-free survival (EFS harmoniously defined as the time from randomization until the first evidence of either biochemical progression (prostate-specific antigen (PSA) ≥ 0.4 ng/mL and rising after completion of any post-operative radiotherapy), clinical or radiological progression, initiation of a non-trial treatment, death from prostate cancer or a PSA level of at least 2.0 ng/mL at any time after randomization) with a toxicity profile in favor of eSRT over aRT. For some, these trials closed the discussion between aRT and (e)SRT. Several reserves must be raised before closing the debate so rapidly. The number of events was quite low in the three trials with a relatively short follow-up. Despite a non-significant benefit in the ARTISTIC meta-analysis, the EFS favored aRT over eSRT in the GETUG-AFU17 and the RAVES trials. Inclusion criteria and study design substantially differed from one trial to another, especially regarding the inclusion/exclusion of patients with a lymph node invasion (LNI). Contemporary imaging modalities such as PET-PSMA were not used, and the performances of recent prognostic tools such as genomic tests [10] were not used or evaluated. In this review, we aim to revisit the place of aRT and eSRT in patients operated on with high-risk PCa and give an overview of the tools available for personalizing the best treatment selection for each patient.

2. Adjuvant Radiotherapy Versus Salvage Radiotherapy

The prostate-specific antigen (PSA) level at the time of post-operative RT was proved to be critical, with a high correlation between the PSA value and the risk of bRFS [11]. Pre-SRT PSA is often used in prediction models among other features such as the PSA doubling time, the use of concomitant or neoadjuvant androgen-deprivation therapy (ADT), the pathology Gleason grade, the surgical margins as well as the presence of LNI [11]. Performance of aRT versus SRT, but only in patients who presented a high-risk of BCR, was thus evaluated. Three RCTs were conducted with different inclusion/exclusion criteria. With a cohort of 425 men with a T3N0M0 PCa treated either with a 60 to 64 Gy aRT or observation, the SWOG S8794 trial showed that aRT reduces the risk of metastasis and benefits OS [4]. It is to be noted that a non-negative post-operative PSA was not considered as an exclusion criteria and 33.4% of the overall population had a post-operative PSA > 0.2 ng/mL. A similar rate of non-negative post-operative PSA was observed in the EORTC 22911 RCT (rate of 29.9% in the overall cohort) [1]. Only the ARO 96-02/AUO AP 09/95 study considered this situation as a progression and, thus, as an exclusion criterion [5]. Considering the inconsistency of the post-operative PSA level, some would argue that these trials are more a comparison between (early) SRT vs. delayed SRT than aRT vs. observation. Furthermore, the three RCTs had substantial differences regarding other inclusion criteria: only pT3N0 patients were included in the SWOG S8794 [4], while ARO 96-02/AUO AP 09/95 [5] included pT4 patients and patients in EORTC 22911 [1] had at least two risk features. Among the three RCTs, only the SWOG S8794 trial used metastasis recurrence-free survival as the primary endpoint, while the EORTC 22911 used bRFS and ARO 96-02/AUO AP 09/95 a progression-free survival (PFS), but defined as the non-occurrence of BCR, local or distant clinical recurrence or death from any cause. The three RCTs met their respective primary endpoints, but both EORTC 22911 and ARO 96-02/AUO AP 09/95 failed to prove the benefit of aRT on MFS and OS (secondary endpoints). Results from these three RCTs were pooled in a meta-analysis conducted by the Cochrane Library [12]. Despite the presented biases of these trials, this meta-analysis concluded to an improvement of OS and MFS with aRT over observation but only with a longer follow-up. To be reminded, the mean follow-up durations in the SWOG S8794, EORTC 22911 and ARO 96-02/AUO AP 09/95 trials were approximately 12.5, 10.6 and 9.4 years, respectively. A meta-analysis published several years before concluded to the absence of an OS benefit of aRT, supporting the absolute need of a longer follow-up [13]. Since these three RCTs, a fourth RCT has also been presented confirming the bRFS benefit of aRT vs. observation but with a mean follow-up of 8.6 years in the observation group, with no benefit on MFS and OS [14]. In spite of this level A data, aRT remained widely underused. For instance, in the United States of America, between 2004 and 2015, only 11.7% of the 189,240 eligible patients (adverse events on pathology reports) received aRT [15]. The rate rose to 28.9% in the very high-risk cohort (at least two risk features among ≥pT3b, pathological Gleason 8–10 and pN1). This under-utilization reflects the puzzlement of urologists and radiation oncologists regarding a clinical setting in which only 30–70% of the patients will present with an actual BCR and eventually benefit from aRT. The other 30–70% would experience a higher grade 2 genitourinary morbidity with no actual clinical benefit [1,4,5]. For completeness, the results of these three RCTs are available as Table 1.
Table 1

Key results from the adjuvant vs. salvage radiotherapy trials.

TrialSWOG S8794 [4]EORTC 22911 [1]ARO 96-02/AUO AP 09/95 [5]
Inclusion/Exclusion criteriaInclusion criteria:

pT3

pN0 or pNx

Exclusion criteria: no exclusion criteria based on the post-operative PSA level
Inclusion criteria: pT2-pT3 + pN0 + at least one adverse feature

capsular perforation

positive surgical margins

seminal vesicle invasion

Exclusion criteria: no exclusion criteria based on the post-operative PSA level
Inclusion criteria:

pT3 or pT4

pN0

Exclusion criteria: patients with a detectable post-operative PSA level were excluded
Modality of radiotherapy

Prostate fossa: 60–64 Gy/30–32 fractions

Pelvis: no

ADT: no

Prostate fossa: 50 Gy/25 fractions

Reduced volume: boost of 10 Gy/5 fractions

Pelvis: no

ADT: no

Prostate fossa: 60 Gy/30 fractions

Pelvis: no

ADT: no

RT triggeraRT: Randomization in the 16 weeks following surgery, start of RT in the 10 working days following randomizationObservation: rising PSAaRT: start of RT in the 16 weeks following surgeryObservation: rising PSAaRT: start of RT in the 6–12 weeks following surgeryObservation: rising PSA
Primary EndpointMFSbRFSPFS: biochemical recurrence, local or distant clinical recurrence or death of any cause
Secondary Endpoints

bRFS

OS

PROs

cPFS

OS

PROs

bRFS

OS

PROs

PopulationTotal: n = 425Total: n = 1005Total: n = 385
Observation: n = 211aRT: n = 214 p Observation: n = 503aRT: n = 502 p Observation: n = 159aRT: n = 148 p
Pathology extent of disease
Positive surgical margins only---15.7%16.7%0.73---
Excapsular extension (ECE) 68% *67% *0.9158.8%57.4%0.7047%51%0.56
Seminal vesicle invasion (SVI) 11%10%0.8625.4%25.5%0.9717%16%0.93
Both ECE/positive margins and SVI21%23%0.70---27%27%1.00
Invasion of surrounding organs 0.0%0.0%----8%3%0.10
Pathology Gleason score
2–646%57%0.03WHO-Evaluated36%38%0.81
738%34%0.4554%50%0.56
8–1016%9.0%0.0410%12%0.71
Central pathology reviewIncomplete: available for 73% NoIncomplete: available for 85%
Pre-RT PSA level
Available data186 (88.2%)190 (88.8%)0.97502 (99.8%)497 (99.0%) ---
<0.2 ng/mL68%65%0.5868.6%70.3% 100%100%-
≥0.2 ng/mL32%35%31.2%28.7% ---
Percentage of performed RT33.2%100%?<0.000130.8%91.0% ?(34 patients refused aRT)-
Follow-up (median, years)12.5 (IQR 11.1–14.0)12.7 (IQR 11.4–15.1)-10.6 (IQR 8.4–12.5) 9.4 (IQR 7.2–10.8)9.3 (IQR 7.3–10.7)-
bRFS (median, years)3.110.3-6.113.2----
PFS (median, years)------4.9Not reached-
Proportion with 10-year MFS61%71%0.0471.3%76.5%0.07---
Proportion with 10-year OS66%74%0.0980.7%76.9%0.16---
Grade 2 or higher late genitourinary toxicity9.5%17.8%0.0213.5%21.3%0.0030.0%2.0% **0.23 **
Grade 2 or higher late genitointestinal toxicity0.0%3.3%0.021.9%2.5%0.470.0%1.4%0.42

* Patients with positives margins only (no ECE) could be included. ** Incontinence was not assessed. Abbreviations: wd: working days, RT: radiotherapy, aRT: adjuvant radiotherapy, SRT: salvage radiotherapy, ADT: androgen deprivation therapy, IQR: Inter-Quartile Range, bRFS: biochemical recurrence-free survival defined as the time from randomization to biochemical recurrence, MFS: metastasis recurrence-free survival, PFS: progression-free survival, cPFS: clinical progression-free survival, PROs: patient reported outcomes.

Genitourinary morbidity after post-operative radiotherapy is correlated to the delay between surgery and start of RT and the patient’s complete functional recovery [16]. Two conflicting issues, thus, seem to oppose themselves: the EFS and the quality of life of our patients.

3. Adjuvant Radiotherapy Versus Early Salvage Radiotherapy

Early salvage radiotherapy (eSRT) is defined as the delivery of SRT to patients with low level rising PSA values (PSA > 0.1–0.2 ng/mL). Use of eSRT is supported by solid retrospective data such as multi-institutional retrospective studies [17]. With 510 included patients, no significant differences in terms of distant metastasis and mortality when compared to aRT were observed. This absence of significant difference in mortality and the lower rate of genitourinary morbidity when compared to aRT led to eSRT being often preferred by some urologists, even in patients harboring pathological risk factors. Three separate RCTs were thus conducted to evaluate the benefit of aRT over eSRT. Again, these RCTs differ on their respective primary endpoints and inclusion/exclusion criteria but were pooled in a planned meta-analysis [9]. None of the RADICALS-RT, RAVES or GETUG-17 demonstrated a significant benefit on MFS or OS (secondary endpoints), the respective endpoints being bRFS for the RAVES trial and EFS for the RADICALS-RT and GETUG-17 trials. Interestingly, the median follow-up was significantly shorter than the “aRT vs. observation” trials with respective FUs of 4.9, 6.1 and 6.3 years. The only positive RCT on aRT vs. observation for MFS was that with the longest follow-up (14.7 years for the aRT cohort and 12.9 for the observation cohort). Such a short follow-up is especially troublesome in this setting because of several points: When given (RADICALS-RT and GETUG-AFU-17), ADT artificially prolongs bRFS. Indeed, BCR under ADT at this stage of the disease almost never happens. On the aRT arm, ADT is administered shortly after the randomization and probably 1 to 2 months before the start of aRT. On the eSRT arm, ADT and eSRT could start concomitantly. This design adds a systematic bias that probably negatively impacts the aRT’s results Because of the definition of BCR, patients with the same biochemical control can be classified differently only because of their affected treatment group. For instance, in the GETUG-AFU-17 trial: BCR will be reached as soon as the PSA rises to 0.4 ng/mL at least 6 months after RT completion for the aRT arm, whereas in the SRT arm, BCR will be reached at the time of the follow-up meetings several months after RT completion. Similarly, defining the bRFS from the date of randomization contributes to this statistical bias. This difference adds a systematic extension of the bRFS in the SRT arm that is problematic with such a short follow-up. This directly induces a possible bias as observed in the RAVES trial with a 5-year BCR-free rate of 86% and 87% for the aRT and eSRT arm, while the 8-year BCR-free rate fell to 80% and 75% for the aRT and eSRT arms, respectively [7]. The GETUG-AFU-17 trial was closed prematurely because of the low rate of events. The results from the three RCTs (summarized in Table 2) were pooled in the ARTISTIC meta-analysis that seemed to confirm the “observation” attitude [9], with the authors concluding to the absence of benefit of aRT over eSRT for all patients. None of the patients seemed to significantly benefit from aRT, even on the sub-group analysis. It is to be noted that patients with a Gleason score ≥ 8, a high CAPRA-S risk group and especially patients with an LNI were insufficiently represented (respective rates of 15.1%, 35.2% and 3.9%). Data on very high-risk patients (CAPRA-S risk score ≥ 8) are unavailable. Knowing the 2.4-fold increase in risk with a 2-point increase on the CAPRA-S, these detailed data are needed [18]. These very high-risk patients are those who probably benefit the most from a post-operative treatment [19]. Unfortunately, in spite of their efforts, data regarding very high-risk patients are inconclusive and need further research. Among the risk features, LNI needs a specific focus given its low representation in the previously presented trials.
Table 2

Key results from the adjuvant vs. early salvage radiotherapy trials.

TrialRADICALS-RT [8]GETUG-AFU 17 [6]RAVES [7]
Inclusion/Exclusion criteriaInclusion criteria: patients with at least one risk feature among:

pT3 or pT4

Gleason score ≥ 7

Positive surgical margins

Pre-operative PSA ≥ 10 ng/mL

Exclusion criteria:

patients with a detectable post-operative PSA level were excluded

pN0/pNx was not an exclusion criteria

Inclusion criteria:

pT3-pT4a

pN0 or pNx

positive surgical margins

Exclusion criteria: patients with a detectable post-operative PSA level were excluded
Inclusion criteria: patients with at least one risk feature among:

pT3a or pT3b

positive surgical margins

Exclusion criteria:

patients with a detectable post-operative PSA level were excluded

pN0/pNx was not an exclusion criteria

Modality of radiotherapy

Prostate fossa: 66 Gy/33 fractions or 52.5 Gy/20 fractions

Pelvis: at the physician’s discretion

ADT: if participating in RADICALS-HD, random allocation to 0, 6 or 24 months of ADT

Prostate fossa: 66 Gy/33 fractions

Pelvis: at the physician’s discretion

ADT: 6 months for all patients

Prostate fossa: 64 Gy/32 fractions

Pelvis: no

ADT: no

RT triggeraRT: initiation within both 2 months of randomization and 26 weeks of radical prostatectomyObservation: initiation within 2 months of biochemical recurrenceStart of RT could be delayed by up to 2 months in case of ADTaRT: start of RT within 3–6 months of radical prostatectomyObservation: when BCR occurredaRT: start of RT within 4 months of radical prostatectomyObservation: within 4 months of BCR
Primary EndpointEFSEFSbRFS
Secondary Endpoints

MFS

OS

Disease-specific survival

PROs

MFS

OS

Acute and late toxicities

Change in QOL

Time to initiation of ADT

Time to local, regional and distant progression

OS

Acute and late toxicities

PopulationTotal: n = 1396Total: n = 424Total: n = 333
Observation: n = 699aRT: n = 697 p Observation: n = 212aRT: n = 212 p Observation: n = 167aRT: n = 166 p
Pathology extent of disease
Positive surgical margin63%63%----68%66%0.79
Excapsular extension or positive margin (pT3a)56%58%0.4877%77%----
Seminal vesicle invasion (pT3b)19%18%0.6820%21%0.8920%19%0.93
Invasion of surrounding organs (pT4)1%1%-2%1%0.65---
Pathology Gleason score
2–67%7%-10%10%-2%4%0.45
775%77%0.4279%82%0.5183%81%0.74
8–1018%16%0.3611%8%0.3715%15%-
Lymph node involvement
Involved5%4%0.440%0%-1%0%0.61
Not involved or unknown95%96%100%100%-100%99%
CAPRA-S risk group
Low (0–2)8%8%-Not available13%13%-
Intermediate (3–5)55%55%-60%59%0.94
High (≥6)37%37%-27%29%0.78
Central pathology reviewNoNoAvailable but pathology reporting based on pathology results from local institution
Percentage of performed RT32.0%93%<0.000154%97%<0.000150%95.8%<0.0001
Follow-up (median, years)4.96.2 (IQR 3.9–8.3) 6.5 (IQR 4.3–8.1)-6.1 (IQR 4.3–7.5)-
Proportion with 5-year EFS85%88%0.1290%92%0.5889%86%0.51
Proportion with 8-year EFS------79%80%0.93
MFSImmatureImmature---
Proportion with 8-year OSImmatureImmature97%92%0.08
Grade 2 or higher late genitourinary toxicity---7%27%<0.000154% *70% *0.002
Grade 2 or higher late genitointestinal toxicity---5%8%0.2410% *14% *0.53
Late diarrheaG1 or 28%17%<0.00017%12%--
G3<1%1%-0%0%-
G40%<1%-0%0%-
Late proctitisG1 or 25%13%<0.00013%8%--
G3<1%1%-0%1%-
G40%0%-0%0%-
Late cystitisG1 or 27%13%<0.00050%0%--
G31%1%-0%<1%-
G40%0%-0%0%-
Late hematuriaG1 or 24%12%<0.00014%12%--
G3<1%4%-<1%2%-
G40%0%-<1%0%-
Late urethral strictureG1 or 23%6%0.00256%9%--
G32%4%-0%<1%-
G4<1%0%-0%0%-

* For the RAVES trial, no differences were made between acute and late toxicities in the presented toxicity results. These rates are thus overestimated when compared to the GETUG-AFU-17 and the RADICALS-RT trials. Abbreviations: EFS: Event-Free survival (Event being defined as the occurrence of BCR, local or distant recurrence, death of any cause), BCR: Biochemical Recurrence, MFS: metastasis recurrence-free survival, PROs: patient reported outcomes, QOL: Quality of Life, IQR: Inter-Quartile Range.

4. Impact of an LNI in the Choice of aRT and eSRT

LNI is known to be a major risk feature for PCa patients because it represents a shift in the disease from a localized to a metastatic state. Management of these patients is, thus, a priority. To our knowledge, no prospective trial evaluating the benefit of aRT over SRT or (e)SRT has focused specifically on patients with a pN1 status [20]. LNI was an exclusion criteria for the three RCTs comparing aRT and observation [1,4,5]. Retrospective data suggest a clinical benefit of aRT over ADT alone in certain subsets of patients. Adjuvant radiotherapy significantly impacts cancer-specific mortality in two sub-groups of patients: patients with 1 to 2 positives nodes with a Gleason score 7–10 or pT3b/PT4/positive margins (group 3) or patients with 3–4 positives nodes (group 4) [21]. Patients with ≥4 positive nodes probably were micro-metastatic. The rest of the patients did not harbor enough risk features to benefit from aRT as previously proven [19]. aRT was systematically associated with ADT. This simple selection tool was externally validated with a significant reduction in overall mortality in the aRT + ADT arm when compared to the ADT alone arm. In Groups 3 and 4, hazard ratios were respectively 0.75 (0.62–0.91) and 0.57 (0.38–0.86) [22]. Even without this group selection, the addition of aRT to ADT in pN1 patients still appears to be beneficial to overall survival [23]. As previously stated, only two of the three RCTs pooled in the ARTISTIC meta-analysis allowed patients with LNI to be included. Patients with LNI represent a very small subset of the overall cohort (3.0%). No conclusions regarding the impact of LNI on the effect of RT timing could thus be proposed, leaving clinicians wondering about the generalizability of the aRT vs. eSRT results to the pN1 patients.

5. Impact of ADT on the Choice of aRT and eSRT

A major possible confounding factor was the possibility (or non-possibility) of concomitant ADT, depending on the RCT. The addition of 24 months of ADT to SRT was significantly associated with longer MFS and OS in the RTOG 9601 trial [24]. The CAPRA-S score was not evaluable in this specific study but, again, a low rate of Gleason ≥ 8 score is observed (17.3%) and a low PSA level at the time of randomization, with 53.3% of the patients having a PSA level < 0.7 ng/mL. However, this benefit of ADT was not consistent across the whole range of patients. On a multicentric cohort, only patients with more aggressive characteristics at the time of SRT (pT3b/4 and grade group ≥ 4 or pT3b/4 and pre-SRT PSA ≥ 0.4 ng/mL) had a significantly better MFS with ADT [25]. The value of the pre-SRT PSA level was confirmed as an efficient surrogate for the benefit of ADT. In patients with a pre-SRT PSA level < 0.6 ng/mL, the benefit of adding ADT on OS was not significant, probably because of the lower OS benefit counterbalanced by the cardiovascular morbidity associated with ADT [26]. Pre-SRT PSA thus stands out as a potential prognostic biomarker for patient selection before ADT + SRT. Delivered in selected patients with a very high-risk profile but a long life expectancy and no post-operative dysfunction, aRT could be seen as an effective possibility to postpone ADT. Furthermore, data supporting the addition of ADT to aRT remain scarce, with several studies reporting the absence of an OS benefit [27], probably due to the low PSA value at the time of aRT. A note must be made regarding the design of the six RCTs focusing on eSRT, SRT and aRT. Apart from the RADICALS trial, none of the RCTs were designed or powered enough to evaluate the impact of ADT in the post-operative setting.

6. Optimizing the Selection of Patients for aRT: Novel Biological and Diagnostic Approaches

All the data seem to converge towards a single challenge, namely the selection of patients for either aRT or (e)SRT. Numerous clinical features are taken into account, with a consensus being adopted on the definition of high-risk and very high-risk patients. Data on high-risk patients are temporary awaiting a longer follow-up, while data on very high-risk patients are scarce or unavailable. The ARTISTIC meta-analysis used the CAPRA-S risk score to combine risk features and stratify the included patients but did not find a significant benefit of aRT over eSRT, even in patients with a high CAPRA-S score. Being an aggregate study-level analysis and not an individual patient-level analysis, all subset analyses in the ARTISTIC meta-analysis were probably underpowered. Before detailing other selection modalities, the importance of a central pathology review must be stressed [28,29]. Pathology review is a major possible cofounding factor in these RCTs in which inclusion criteria are pathology-based. On the three RCTs evaluating aRT vs. eSRT, none had a central pathology review for all patients. Apart from clinical and pathology-based features, other selection modalities were developed. Firstly, one could think disease staging at the time of aRT/SRT could impact the treatment’s outcomes. For example, patients, with an unknown LNI status at the time of post-operative RT and who would be treated with SRT delivered to the prostate fossa only, would not benefit from SRT. With its high sensitivity, 68-GA-PSMA positron emission tomography (PET) appears as the most efficient imaging modality to detect an eventual LNI. However, despite its high sensitivity, performing such an exam did not significantly impact patients’ outcomes [30], probably because of the low rate of detection in the case of PSA < 0.2 ng/mL when aRT or eSRT is performed [31]. PSMA PET associated with a magnetic resonance imaging could enhance the detection rate [32] and possibly modify the definition of radiotherapy target volumes [33,34]. Several clinicians are currently rethinking their approach in the case of BCR, incorporating PSMA PET as a tool to guide diagnostic or therapeutic management. Differing treatments until PSMA PET reveals a relapse site amenable to targeted radiotherapy may be tempting, but given the prognostic value of a negative PSMA PET in the post-operative setting [35], differing RT should only be performed within clinical trials. Characterization of the disease with genomic or radiomics approaches also appear as an efficient tools for patients’ selection. In this setting and on a sub-analysis of 486 patients, a genomic-classifier was significantly correlated with MFS and OS [10]. The Decipher test impacts decision making among patients considered for aRT/eSRT and is an independent predictor of response to RT [36,37]. The Decipher tests stratifies patients among three risk-based cohorts. Patients with a score > 0.6 have the highest risk of recurrence [38]. Such a tool could guide the selection of patients for ADT, aRT/SRT or observation, with a cut-off of 0.6 [10]. A radiomics model based on a sole radiomic feature was externally validated as an efficient tool for the stratification of patients based on their BCR risk [39]. Combining these genomics and radiomics approaches (“radiogenomics”) resulted in higher performances when compared to the Decipher or the CAPRA scores [40]. However, selecting patients at higher risk of bRFS or even metastatic-relapse does not necessarily mean that these patients would benefit more from aRT than from eSRT. Analyzing the performances of these advanced tools in the RAVES, RADICALS-RT and GETUG-AFU-17 trials would be interesting. A summary of the performances of these prognostic tools is available as Table 3. Before clinical implementation, these promising biological and diagnostic tools should be evaluated in clinical trials; the key point remaining the selection of patients that would possibly benefit from aRT on long-term endpoints.
Table 3

Performances of the novel biomarkers for the prediction of patients’ outcomes.

Prediction ToolEndpointResultSetting
Presalvage PSA level [27]OSHR 1.57, p = 0.004Post-hoc analysis
Genomics-only [10]MFSHR 1.26, p < 0.001Post-hoc analysis
OSHR 1.21, p < 0.001
Radiomics-only [39]bRFSHR 5.5, p < 0.0001External validation
Radiomics + Genomics [40]bRFSHR 1.6 p = 0.04Multi-institutional validation

Abbreviations: PSA: Prostate-Specific Antigen, HR: Hazard Ratio, IC95%: 95% Confidence Interval, OS: Overall Survival, MFS: metastasis recurrence-free survival, bRFS: biochemical recurrence-free survival.

7. Discussion

As presented, several key clinical issues were defined to summarize the abundance of literature on the aRT vs. (e)SRT debate. Data regarding aRT vs. SRT and aRT vs. eSRT were limited to published RCTs, while data regarding the impact of LNI and ADT were limited to RCTs or large and/or multicentric retrospective studies. This methodology has the advantage of a clear and concise report but with a risk of selection bias. However, the goal was mainly to discuss current literature data and offer practical insights on present and future perspectives in this clinical setting.

8. Conclusions

With a 5-years follow-up, adjuvant radiotherapy does not appear to significantly impact MFS and OS over eSRT in high-risk PCa patients. These aRT vs. eSRT RCTs confirmed the low value of bRFS as an intermediate surrogate of MFS and OS [41] and probably ended the time for the use of aRT at all. Duration of the follow-up is crucial when focusing on post-operative clinical endpoints where, with only observation, median bRFS ranges from 3.1 to 6.1 years and median OS is often immature due to the lack of follow-up. Clinicians should, thus, be careful not to completely bury aRT as some very selected patients might benefit from it. Delivered in patients with a very high-risk profile such as LNI or a combination of high-risk features (Decipher score > 0.6 or CAPRA-S score ≥ 8 or ≥2 risk factors such as invasion seminal vesicle invasion and positive surgical margins) but a long life expectancy and no post-operative dysfunction, aRT could be seen as an effective possibility to postpone ADT without compromising quality and quantity of life. Data regarding these very high-risk patients need further research. Selection of these patients is a challenge in a situation where clinical and pathological features are insufficient and where imaging modalities such as PET and MRI could be helpful. Translational research should be incorporated into the multidisciplinary management of these patients.
  40 in total

Review 1.  Adjuvant radiotherapy following radical prostatectomy for prostate cancer.

Authors:  Tiffany Daly; Brigid E Hickey; Margot Lehman; Daniel P Francis; Adrienne M See
Journal:  Cochrane Database Syst Rev       Date:  2011-12-07

2.  The CAPRA-S score: A straightforward tool for improved prediction of outcomes after radical prostatectomy.

Authors:  Matthew R Cooperberg; Joan F Hilton; Peter R Carroll
Journal:  Cancer       Date:  2011-06-03       Impact factor: 6.860

Review 3.  Prostate Bed Delineation Guidelines for Postoperative Radiation Therapy: On Behalf Of The Francophone Group of Urological Radiation Therapy.

Authors:  Sophie Robin; Marjory Jolicoeur; Samuel Palumbo; Thomas Zilli; Gilles Crehange; Olivier De Hertogh; Talar Derashodian; Paul Sargos; Carl Salembier; Stéphane Supiot; Corina Udrescu; Olivier Chapet
Journal:  Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys       Date:  2020-11-10       Impact factor: 7.038

4.  Impact of adjuvant radiotherapy on survival of patients with node-positive prostate cancer.

Authors:  Firas Abdollah; R Jeffrey Karnes; Nazareno Suardi; Cesare Cozzarini; Giorgio Gandaglia; Nicola Fossati; Damiano Vizziello; Maxine Sun; Pierre I Karakiewicz; Mani Menon; Francesco Montorsi; Alberto Briganti
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2014-09-22       Impact factor: 44.544

5.  Adjuvant radiotherapy for pathological T3N0M0 prostate cancer significantly reduces risk of metastases and improves survival: long-term followup of a randomized clinical trial.

Authors:  Ian M Thompson; Catherine M Tangen; Jorge Paradelo; M Scott Lucia; Gary Miller; Dean Troyer; Edward Messing; Jeffrey Forman; Joseph Chin; Gregory Swanson; Edith Canby-Hagino; E David Crawford
Journal:  J Urol       Date:  2009-01-23       Impact factor: 7.450

6.  A novel imaging based Nomogram for predicting post-surgical biochemical recurrence and adverse pathology of prostate cancer from pre-operative bi-parametric MRI.

Authors:  Lin Li; Rakesh Shiradkar; Patrick Leo; Ahmad Algohary; Pingfu Fu; Sree Harsha Tirumani; Amr Mahran; Christina Buzzy; Verena C Obmann; Bahar Mansoori; Ayah El-Fahmawi; Mohammed Shahait; Ashutosh Tewari; Cristina Magi-Galluzzi; David Lee; Priti Lal; Lee Ponsky; Eric Klein; Andrei S Purysko; Anant Madabhushi
Journal:  EBioMedicine       Date:  2020-12-13       Impact factor: 8.143

7.  A Multi-Institutional Analysis of Prostate Cancer Patients With or Without 68Ga-PSMA PET/CT Prior to Salvage Radiotherapy of the Prostatic Fossa.

Authors:  Nina-Sophie Schmidt-Hegemann; Constantinos Zamboglou; Reinhard Thamm; Chukwuka Eze; Simon Kirste; Simon Spohn; Minglun Li; Christian Stief; Christian Bolenz; Wolfgang Schultze-Seemann; Peter Bartenstein; Vikas Prasad; Ute Ganswindt; Anca-Ligia Grosu; Claus Belka; Benjamin Mayer; Thomas Wiegel
Journal:  Front Oncol       Date:  2021-10-01       Impact factor: 6.244

8.  Adjuvant or early salvage radiotherapy for the treatment of localised and locally advanced prostate cancer: a prospectively planned systematic review and meta-analysis of aggregate data.

Authors:  Claire L Vale; David Fisher; Andrew Kneebone; Christopher Parker; Maria Pearse; Pierre Richaud; Paul Sargos; Matthew R Sydes; Christopher Brawley; Meryem Brihoum; Chris Brown; Sylvie Chabaud; Adrian Cook; Silvia Forcat; Carol Fraser-Browne; Igor Latorzeff; Mahesh K B Parmar; Jayne F Tierney
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2020-09-28       Impact factor: 79.321

9.  Association of Presalvage Radiotherapy PSA Levels After Prostatectomy With Outcomes of Long-term Antiandrogen Therapy in Men With Prostate Cancer.

Authors:  Robert T Dess; Yilun Sun; William C Jackson; Neil K Jairath; Amar U Kishan; David G Wallington; Brandon A Mahal; Bradley J Stish; Zachery S Zumsteg; Robert B Den; William A Hall; Laila A Gharzai; Elizabeth M Jaworski; Zachary R Reichert; Todd M Morgan; Rohit Mehra; Edward M Schaeffer; Oliver Sartor; Paul L Nguyen; William Robert Lee; Seth A Rosenthal; Jeff M Michalski; Matthew J Schipper; James J Dignam; Thomas M Pisansky; Anthony L Zietman; Howard M Sandler; Jason A Efstathiou; Felix Y Feng; William U Shipley; Daniel E Spratt
Journal:  JAMA Oncol       Date:  2020-05-01       Impact factor: 31.777

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  1 in total

1.  PSMA PET-CT Imaging Predicts Treatment Progression in Men with Biochemically Recurrent Prostate Cancer-A Prospective Study of Men with 3 Year Follow Up.

Authors:  Sean Ong; Claire Pascoe; Brian D Kelly; Zita Ballok; David Webb; Damien Bolton; Declan Murphy; Shomik Sengupta; Patrick Bowden; Nathan Lawrentschuk
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2022-05-31       Impact factor: 6.575

  1 in total

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