Chatterjee R, Chan J, Mayles H, Cicconi S, Syndikus I. Long-term Results of Hypofractionated Radiotherapy With Intra-prostatic Boosts in Men With Intermediate- and High-risk Prostate Cancer: A Phase II Trial.
Clin Oncol (R Coll Radiol) 2024;
36:e473-e482. [PMID:
39242247 DOI:
10.1016/j.clon.2024.08.011]
[Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 04/29/2024] [Revised: 08/01/2024] [Accepted: 08/19/2024] [Indexed: 09/09/2024]
Abstract
AIMS
In the conventionally fractionated phase III FLAME prostate trial, focal boosts improved local control and biochemical disease-free survival (bDFS). We explored the toxicity and effectiveness of a moderately hypofractionated schedule with focal boosts.
MATERIAL AND METHODS
BIOPROP20 is a phase II single-arm non-randomised trial for intermediate- to very high-risk localised prostate cancer patients with bulky tumour volumes. Multi-parametric magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and 18F-choline positron emission tomography-computed tomography (PET-CT) scans were used for staging and boost volume definition. Patients were treated with 60Gy in 20 fractions with a boost dose up to 68Gy. Five patients with positive lymph nodes on the PET-CT scan received radiotherapy to pelvic lymph nodes (45Gy to elective nodes, boosted up to 50Gy to involved nodes). Primary outcomes were acute (≤18 weeks) and late urinary and gastrointestinal toxicity, prospectively recorded up to 5 years with Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events v4 (CTCAE). Secondary outcomes were biochemical or clinical progression, metastasis-free survival (MFS), and overall survival (OS).
RESULTS
61 patients completed radiotherapy with hormone therapy (range: 6-36 months). Cumulative acute and late gastrointestinal toxicity was low at 6.6% and 5.0%, respectively. Cumulative acute and late urinary toxicity was 49.2% and 30.1%, respectively; the prevalence reduced to 5.9% at 5 years. At 5 years: 6 patients had biochemical progression (bDFS: 88.5%; 95% CI: 80.2-97.6%), the MFS was 82.4% (95% CI: 73.0-92.9%), 5 patients died (OS: 91.2%; 95% CI: 84.1-98.9%), one with prostate cancer. The prostate, boost, nodal planning volumes, and the organs at risk (rectum, bowel, urethra, and bladder) met the optimal protocol dose constraints. There was a trend to increased urinary toxicity with increasing urethral (RR: 1.95, 95% CI: 0.73-5.22, p = 0.18), but not bladder dose.
CONCLUSION
Focal boosts with a 20 fraction hypofractionated prostate radiotherapy schedule are associated with an acceptable risk of gastrointestinal and urinary toxicity and achieve good cancer control.
CLINICALTRIALS
GOV IDENTIFIER
NCT02125175.
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