Abstract

Identify prognostic factors associated to late urinary toxicity in patients with prostate cancer submitted to radical conformal radiotherapy (3DCRT). From July 1997 to January 2002, 285 patients with localized prostate cancer were consecutively treated with 3DCRT and retrospectively analyzed. Thirty seven (13%) patients were submitted to transurethral prostate resection previously to 3DCRT. The median dose delivered to the prostate was 7920 cGy (7020-8460). Patient and treatment characteristics were analyzed and correlated to late urinary toxicity grade 2-3, especially whether certain radiation doses applied to certain bladder volumes, when visualized through computerized tomography (CT) planning, correlated with the observed actuarial incidences of late urinary complications, using bladder volume as a continuous variable. On a median follow-up of 53.6 months (3.6-95.3), the 5-year actuarial free from late urinary toxicity grade 2-3 survival was 91.1%. Seven and fifteen patients presented late urinary toxicity grades 2 and 3, respectively. Prior transurethral resection of prostate and radiation dose over 70 Gy on 30% of initial bladder volume were independent prognostic factors for late urinary toxicity grade 2-3. This study suggests that restricting radiation doses to 70 Gy or less on 30% of bladder volume, visualized through CT planning, may reduce late urinary complications. It furthermore suggests that patients with prior transurethral resection of prostate may indicate a group of patients with a greater risk for late urinary toxicity grade 2-3 after 3DCRT.

Highlights

  • Several studies have reported that higher radiation doses improve the control over prostate cancer [1,2,3,4]

  • Toxicity Grade 2-3 after Radiation for Prostate Cancer pose of this study is to find out the parameters of this dose-volume relation by means of the initial computerized tomography (CT) planning, as well as factors inherent to the patients that might reduce the rate of late urinary complications

  • Statistical analysis - Patient and treatment characteristics were analyzed and correlated to late urinary toxicity, especially whether certain radiation doses applied to certain bladder volumes, visualized through CT planning, correlated with the observed actuarial incidences of late urinary complications, using volume as a continuous variable

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Summary

Introduction

Several studies have reported that higher radiation doses improve the control over prostate cancer [1,2,3,4]. Many studies have observed that the incidence of rectal complications is not exclusively associated to the radiation dose, and to the volume of organ irradiated [2,6,7]. Grade 2 or higher late urinary complications occur in 10-13% of patients treated with radiotherapy, but the relation between radiation dose and irradiated bladder volume (dose-volume relation) has not been well documented [2,3,5,8,9]. Toxicity Grade 2-3 after Radiation for Prostate Cancer pose of this study is to find out the parameters of this dose-volume relation by means of the initial CT planning, as well as factors inherent to the patients that might reduce the rate of late urinary complications

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