Abstract

Background and purposeTo assess the long-term results of protocol-based ultrasound-guided salvage pulsed-dose rate brachytherapy in locally recurrent prostate cancer following previous radiation therapy. Materials and methodsA total of 82 patients (median age 69 years) with locally recurrent prostate cancer after previous external beam radiation therapy (43/82, 52.4%), prostatectomy and adjuvant radiation therapy (24/82, 29.3%) or brachytherapy (15/82, 18.3%) were treated with sole salvage interstitial pulsed-dose rate brachytherapy (PDR-BT). The treatment regimen consisted of two PDR-BT sections with 30 Gy (single pulse dose 0.6 Gy/h, 24 h per day) each up to a total reference dose of 60 Gy (EQD2 = 71.5 Gy-eq). The endpoints of the present analysis are cumulative local recurrence-rate, PSA-free survival, overall survival and the treatment-associated late toxicity according to the “Common Toxicity Criteria” with a median follow-up of 49 months (range, 12–129 months). ResultsThe 5-y. overall cumulative local recurrence rate was 17.7% with no significant differences between low, intermediate and high-risk groups. Differences in PSA-free survival were marginally non-significant, at 67.3%, 70.4% and 63.8% for low, intermediate and high risk group, respectively. No grade 3 gastrointestinal late side effects have been observed. The most common late side effect was urinary incontinence grade 1–3 and urinary frequency/urgency grade 1–3 in 18.3% (15/82) and 17.1% (14/82) of patients, respectively. ConclusionPDR salvage brachytherapy in local recurrent previously irradiated prostate cancer is efficient with low late toxicity. Salvage-brachytherapy represents a valuable therapeutic option for the treatment of previously irradiated locally recurrent prostate cancer.

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