Abstract
Purpose: SABR-Dual is a phase III trial with an initial phase-I safety cohort, of two-fraction stereotactic radiotherapy (SABR) with optional MRI-based focal boost, using peri-rectal spacing, for localized prostate cancer. This represents the initial report from the phase-I non-randomized cohort. Materials and methods: Subjects had favorable intermediate risk (FIR) or low risk (LR) prostate adenocarcinoma, and gland volume <80cc. All underwent radiopaque hydrogel spacer and fiducial marker placement prior to simulation (CT and 3-tesla T2 MRI). The clinical target volume included the entire prostate, and in FIR patients, 1-2cm of seminal vesicle (SV). A 2mm expansion was applied for planning target volume (PTV), and a dose of 27 Gy was prescribed to the PTV-prostate, 23 Gy to the PTV-SV, with an optional 30 Gy simultaneous boost (SIB) to an MRI-defined dominant lesion. Primary endpoint was 3-month patient-reported changes in quality of life based on the EPIC-26, IPSS, and SHIM questionnaires. Secondary endpoints were 6-month quality of life, acute toxicity (using CTCAEv5) and early PSA response. Results: Among the 20 patients in the phase-I cohort, 95% had FIR disease, and 50% received an SIB. At median follow-up of 8 months, a 3-month minimally clinically important change occurred in 1/20 (5%), 6/20 (30%), 2/20 (10%), 4/20 (20%), and 5/20 (25%) in urinary incontinence, urinary obstructive, bowel, sexual, and hormonal domains. There was a mean increase of 1±5.4 in IPSS and decrease of 1.8±6.5 in SHIM scores. Rates of grade 2 urinary and bowel toxicity 10% and 0%, respectively, with no grade ≥3 toxicities. Mean PSA decrease at last follow-up was 70.4%±17.7%. Conclusion: This generalizable protocol of two-fraction prostate SABR using peri-rectal spacing is a safe approach for ultra-hypofractionated dose-escalation, with minimal acute toxicity. Longer-term outcomes and direct comparison with standard 5-fraction SABR are being studied in the phase-III randomized portion of SABR-Dual.
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More From: International Journal of Radiation Oncology, Biology, Physics
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