Abstract

Until 1998 in Japan, very few institutions were treating prostate cancer solely with radiotherapy (RT) >70 Gy and most were using < or =65 Gy in combination with hormone therapy. The present study reports the long-term results of RT combined with hormone therapy for localized and locally advanced prostate cancer. We investigated 57 patients who were treated by external beam RT plus hormone therapy (median age 79 years, median prostate-specific antigen concentration 15.0 ng/ml) between 1992 and 1998. Patients received 40 Gy of radiation to the pelvis and an additional 20 Gy as a prostatic boost. Hormone therapy was begun on the first day of irradiation and continued thereafter. The median follow-up was 93.3 months and the 5 and 10 year actual overall survival rates were 67.8 and 32.6%, respectively, with 5 and 10 year cause-specific survival rates of 97.9 and 95.0%, respectively. The expected survival rate was 66.2% at 5 years, and overall survival was above expected survival. Only one patient developed severe proctitis (Grade 3). The 5 year occurrence of Grade 1/2 genitourinary toxicity was 23.2%. Combined RT and hormone therapy has a good long-term outcome without severe adverse events. The overall survival rate compares well with the expected survival rate.

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