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Prostate-specific antigen kinetics and biochemical control following stereotactic body radiation therapy, high dose rate brachytherapy, and low dose rate brachytherapy: A multi-institutional analysis of 3502 patients

Authors :
Naomi Y. Jiang
Nicholas G. Nickols
Brandon A. Mahal
Sean P. Collins
Ye Yuan
Richard G. Stock
A.T. Dang
Eric J. Lehrer
Nicholas D. Prionas
Michael L. Steinberg
Nicholas G. Zaorsky
Rebecca Levin-Epstein
Minsong Cao
Constantine Mantz
Leszek Miszczyk
A. Napieralska
Ryan Cook
Amar U. Kishan
J. Karen Wong
Mark K. Buyyounouski
D. Jeffrey Demanes
Agnieszka Namysł-Kaletka
Daniel E. Spratt
Hilary P. Bagshaw
Nima Aghdam
Alan J. Katz
David Shabsovich
Albert J. Chang
Matthew Rettig
Eric M. Horwitz
William C. Jackson
Patrick A. Kupelian
Simeng Suy
Source :
Radiotherapy and oncology : journal of the European Society for Therapeutic Radiology and Oncology. 151
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT), low dose rate brachytherapy (LDR-BT) and high dose rate brachytherapy (HDR-BT) are ablative-intent radiotherapy options for prostate cancer (PCa). These vary considerably in dose delivery, which may impact post-treatment prostate-specific antigen (PSA) patterns and biochemical control. We compared PSA kinetics between SBRT, HDR-BT, and LDR-BT, and assessed their relationships to biochemical recurrence-free survival (BCRFS).Retrospective PSA data were analyzed for 3502 men with low-risk (n = 2223; 63.5%), favorable intermediate-risk (n = 869; 24.8%), and unfavorable intermediate-risk (n = 410; 11.7%) PCa treated with SBRT (n = 1716; 49.0%), HDR-BT (n = 512; 14.6%), or LDR-BT (n = 1274; 36.4%) without upfront androgen deprivation therapy at 10 institutions from 1990 to 2017. We compared nadir PSA (nPSA), time to nPSA, achievement of nPSA0.2 ng/mL and0.5 ng/mL, rates of nPSA0.4 ng/mL at 4 years, and BCRFS.Median follow-up was 72 months. Median nPSA and nPSA0.2 ng/mL were stratified by risk group (interaction p ≤ 0.001). Median nPSA and time to nPSA were 0.2 ng/mL at 44 months after SBRT, 0.1-0.2 ng/mL at 37 months after HDR-BT, and 0.01-0.2 ng/mL at 51 months after LDR-BT (mean log nPSA p ≤ 0.009 for LDR-BT vs. SBRT or HDR-BT for low/favorable intermediate-risk). There were no differences in nPSA0.4 ng/mL at 4 years (p ≥ 0.51). BCRFS was similar for all three modalities (p ≥ 0.27). Continued PSA decay beyond 4 years was predictive of durable biochemical control.LDR-BT led to lower nPSAs with longer continued decay compared to SBRT and HDR-BT, but no differences in BCRFS.

Details

ISSN :
18790887
Volume :
151
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Radiotherapy and oncology : journal of the European Society for Therapeutic Radiology and Oncology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....dab8f2709f13b45258a05b577c0c6228