Abstract

Purpose: Following radical prostatectomy, prostate bed radiotherapy (PBRT) has been combined with either long-term androgen deprivation therapy (LT-ADT) or short-term ADT with pelvic lymph node radiotherapy (PLNRT) to provide an oncological benefit in randomized trials. McGill 0913 was designed to characterize the efficacy of combining PBRT, PLNRT, and LT-ADT. It is the first study to do so prospectively.Methods: In a single arm phase II trial conduced from 2010 to 2016, 46 post-prostatectomy prostate cancer patients at a high-risk for relapse (pathological Gleason 8+ or T3) were assessed for treatment with combined LT-ADT (24 months), PBRT, and PLNRT. Patients received PLNRT and PBRT (44 Gy in 22 fractions) followed by a PBRT boost (22 Gy in 11 fractions). The primary endpoint was progression-free survival (PFS). Toxicity and quality of life (QoL) were evaluated using CTCAE V3.0 and EQ-5D-3L questionnaires, respectively.Results: Among the 43 patients were treated as per protocol, median PSA was 0.30 μg/L. On surgical pathology, 51% had positive margins, 40% had Gleason 8+ disease, 42% had seminal vesicle involvement, and 19% had lymph node involvement. At a median follow-up of 5.2 years, there were no deaths or clinical progression. At 5 years, PFS was 78.0% (95% Confidence Interval 63.7–95.5%). Not including erectile dysfunction, patients experienced: 14% grade 2 endocrine toxicity while on ADT, one incident of long-term gynecomastia, 5% grade 2 acute urinary toxicity, 5% grade 2 late Urinary toxicity, and 24% long-term hypogonadism. No comparison between the average or minimum self-reported QoL at baseline, during ADT, nor after ADT demonstrated a statistically significant difference.Conclusions: Combining PBRT, PLNRT, and LT-ADT had an acceptable PFS in patients with significant post-operative risk factors for recurrence. While therapy was well-tolerated, long-term hypogonadism was a substantial risk. Further investigations are needed to determine if this combination is beneficial.Trial registration: NCT01255891.

Highlights

  • Three large randomized phase III trials of salvage radiotherapy in prostate cancer have investigated combining prostate bed radiotherapy (PBRT) with androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) and/or pelvic lymph node radiotherapy (PLNRT)

  • No trial of salvage radiotherapy has incorporated both long-term ADT (LT-ADT) and PLNRT among an entire treatment arm. This approach has merit based on the survival benefit of LTADT over short-term ADT (ST-ADT) in high-risk localized prostate cancer patients receiving definitive external beam radiotherapy to the prostate and PLNRT [4]

  • McGill 0913 is the first prospective clinical trial of salvage radiotherapy for prostate cancer to report on combining PNRT and LTADT to PBRT

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Summary

Introduction

Three large randomized phase III trials of salvage radiotherapy in prostate cancer have investigated combining prostate bed radiotherapy (PBRT) with androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) and/or pelvic lymph node radiotherapy (PLNRT). GETUG-AFU 16’s salvage patients had a benefit in metastasis-free survival when short-term ADT (ST-ADT) was added to locoregional treatment (PBRT with PLNRT or previous dissection), compared to no ADT [1]. RTOG 9601 has been the only trial to show a survival advantage when long-term ADT (LT-ADT) was added to PBRT, in comparison to PBRT alone, in salvage patients at a higher risk for recurrence albeit with substantially longer follow-up [3]. No trial of salvage radiotherapy has incorporated both LT-ADT and PLNRT among an entire treatment arm. This approach has merit based on the survival benefit of LTADT over ST-ADT in high-risk localized prostate cancer patients receiving definitive external beam radiotherapy to the prostate and PLNRT [4]. This paper reports on the PFS and quality of life (QoL) after 5 years of median follow-up for this surgically staged high risk population

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