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Prostate/prostate bed salvage stereotactic re-irradiation.

Authors :
Tummineri, Roberta
Fodor, Andrei
Broggi, Sara
Deantoni, Chiara Lucrezia
Fiorino, Claudio
Dell’Oca, Italo
Perna, Lucia
Villa, Stefano
Zerbetto, Flavia
Mangili, Paola
Cozzarini, Cesare
Vecchio, Antonella Del
Di Muzio, Nadia Gisella
Source :
Journal of Radiosurgery & SBRT; 2022 Supplement, Vol. 8, p150-151, 2p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Objective: To evaluate toxicity and outcomes after salvage robotic stereotactic body radiotherapy-SBRT- (CyberKnife®,Accuray, Sunnyvale, Ca) re-irradiation of patients with intraprostatic/prostatic bed recurrences of pelvic malignancies. Methods: From 11/2018 to 10/2021, 20 patients with intraprostatic/prostatic bed recurrence after radiotherapy, diagnosed on MRI/ PET choline/PSMA and/or biopsyproven, underwent a salvage re-irradiation with SBRT: 9 patients with prostate cancer failure after previous radical radiotherapy, and 11 patients after adjuvant/salvage radiotherapy. Median prior RT dose was 70.7 (38.25- 78) Gy and the median interval to SBRT salvage therapy was 79.3 (11-208) months. Median PSA before robotic SBRT was 2.64 (1.14-26.8) ng/ml. Fiducial markers were implanted into the target in 19 of 20 patients. Median SBRT total dose was 35 (30-35) Gy in 5 fractions (EQD2=85 Gy, for α/β 1.5). Median prescription isodose was 70% (59- 81%). In 12 patients, a “urethral sparing” was used. In 10 cases a precautionary therapy with steroids and alphalytics was prescribed during the salvage treatment. Twelve patients received neoadjuvant or concomitant/adjuvant androgen suppressive therapy during their SBRT course. Toxicity was scored in accordance with CTCAE v 5.0. Results: Median follow-up was 17.4 months (2.35- 38.15) months. Acute genitourinary (GU) toxicity was observed in 40% of patients and was limited to grade (G)1 in 35% of patients and G2 (minimal strangury, urgency and occasional urinary incontinence) in 5%. Ten% of patients reported late GU G3 toxicity (urinary retention requiring catheterization and transurethral resection), and 5% G2 urinary toxicity. No acute and late gastrointestinal toxicity was observed. At the last follow-up 2 patients died due to a non cancer-releated cause. Twenty-four-months Kaplan Meier estimates of biochemical relapse-free survival (bRFS) was 78.2% (see Figure 1), local-relapse-free survival (LRFS) 92.3% and distant-metastases-free survival 85.1%. Conclusions: Prostate SBRT re-irradiation with CK is a feasible treatment option, with good short-term outcomes. Longer follow-up is necessary to assess the long-term benefits and to determine late toxicity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
21564639
Volume :
8
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of Radiosurgery & SBRT
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
158700413