Abstract

Purpose/Objective(s): The current study reports long-term overall survival (OS) and biochemical freedom from recurrence (BFFR) after stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) for men with intermediate and high-risk prostate cancer in a single community hospital setting with early adoption.Materials/Methods: Ninety-seven consecutive men with intermediate and high-risk prostate cancer treated with SBRT between 2007 and 2015 were retrospectively studied. Categorical variables for analysis included National Comprehensive Cancer Network risk group, race, Gleason grade group, T stage, use of androgen deprivation therapy, and planning target volume dose. Continuous variables for analysis included pretreatment prostate-specific antigen (PSA), percent cores positive, age at diagnosis, PSA nadir, prostate volume, percent prostate that received 40 Gy, and minimum dose to 0.03 cc of prostate (Dmin). BFFR was assessed using the Phoenix nadir +2 definition. OS and BFFR were estimated using Kaplan–Meier (KM) methodology with comparisons accomplished using log-rank statistics. Multivariable analysis (MVA) was accomplished with a backwards selection Cox proportional-hazards model with statistical significance taken at the p < 0.05 level.Results: Median FU is 78.4 months. Five- and ten-year OS KM estimates are 90.9 and 73.2%, respectively, with 19 deaths recorded. MVA reveals pretreatment PSA (p = 0.032), percent prostate 40 Gy (p = 0.003), and race (p = 0.031) were predictive of OS. Five- and nine-year BFFR KM estimates are 92.1 and 87.5%, respectively, with 10 biochemical failures recorded. MVA revealed PSA nadir (p < 0.001) was the only factor predictive of BFFR. Specifically, for every one-unit increase in PSA nadir, there was a 4.2-fold increased odds of biochemical failure (HR = 4.248). No significant differences in BFFR were found between favorable intermediate, unfavorable intermediate, and high-risk prostate cancer (p = 0.054) with 7-year KM estimates of 96.6, 81.0, and 85.7%, respectively.Conclusions: Favorable OS and BFFR can be expected after SBRT for intermediate and high-risk prostate cancer with non-significant differences seen for BFFR between favorable intermediate, unfavorable intermediate, and high-risk groups. Our 5-year BFFR compares favorably with the HYPO-RT-PC trial of 84%. PSA nadir was predictive of biochemical failure. This study is ultimately limited by the small absolute number of high-risk patients included.

Highlights

  • Owing to advancements in imaging and treatment technologies over the past three decades leading to lower rectal and bladder doses, along with radiobiologic, cost, and convenience rationale, hypofractionated radiotherapy schedules for prostate cancer have increasingly been studied

  • We provide long-term biochemical freedom from recurrence and overall survival outcomes for National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) favorable intermediate, unfavorable intermediate, and high risk localized prostate cancer treated with SBRT in a single community hospital setting with early adoption of this technology

  • Patient characteristics of 97 patients with complete data for overall survival (OS) and biochemical freedom from recurrence (BFFR) are summarized in Tables 1, 2

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Owing to advancements in imaging and treatment technologies over the past three decades leading to lower rectal and bladder doses, along with radiobiologic, cost, and convenience rationale, hypofractionated radiotherapy schedules for prostate cancer have increasingly been studied. In a rapidly changing research landscape, SBRT has demonstrated similar toxicity profiles and non-inferior disease control compared with conventionally fractionated radiotherapy in many phase I/II trials [2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17], a landmark phase III trial [18], a National Cancer Database propensity matched analysis [19], and a recently completed systematic review and meta-analysis [20] Included in these trials were intermediate and high-risk patients; not all studies provided biochemical or overall survival data as stratified by risk group and high-risk patients made up only a minority of patients. Despite the rapid change in published literature supporting SBRT in all risk groups, Variable

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call