Abstract
85 Background: The effectiveness of diagnostics of local recurrence of prostatic adenocarcinoma after radical radiotherapy and local retreatment high definition brachytherapy and its influence on the prostatic cancer survival. Methods: 55 patients with locally advanced prostatic adenocarcinoma with rising PSA level after radical radiotherapy and exclusion of distant metastases underwent prostatic biopsy. ECOG performance status 0-1 were eligible. The histopathological confirmation was obtained in 22 cases, and 33 patients had negative biopsy. In the case of positive biopsy radical salvage brachytherapy was performed in all patients. In the case of negative biopsy definitive anti-androgen therapy was administered in patients with PSA progression. Anti – androgen therapy was performed as adjuvant and neoadjuvant treatment after brachytherapy. In the course of the long (median 108months) observation we assessed prostatic specific mortality in both groups. In addition we assessed time to PSA progression during the antiandrogen therapy Results: From Mar 2002 we observed 55 patients with rising PSA after radical radiotherapy for the prostatic adenocarcinoma. We confirmed local recurrence of prostatic adenocarcinoma in 22 cases. The median time to biopsy after radiotherapy was 41months. The median observation time after post-radiotherapy biopsy was 108 months. All of the 22 patients were treated with salvage brachytherapy. There were 8 prostatic cancer specific deaths, 1 in the group treated by brachytherapy and 7 in the non-treated group. Median prostatic cancer survival (PCSOS) was 120 months in the treated group vs 75,6 months non-treated, but this difference was not statistically significant (P value 0,49). Median time to progression PSA was 108 months in the treated group vs 48 months non-treated and was not statistically significant. Significant toxicity were not reported. Conclusions: In long time observation we revealed, including the time of antiandrogen treatment depletion therapy, that in the patients with rising PSA and local recurrence treated with high-dose brachytherapy have no worse prognosis than patients with no local progression.
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