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Fractionated stereotactic body radiotherapy for up to five prostate cancer oligometastases: interim outcomes of a prospective clinical trial

Version 2 2024-06-13, 13:44
Version 1 2020-07-02, 15:18
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-13, 13:44 authored by P Bowden, AW See, M Frydenberg, H Haxhimolla, AJ Costello, D Moon, P Ruljancich, J Grummet, A Crosthwaite, G Pranavan, JS Peters, K So, SM Gwini, DP McKenzie, S Nolan, LML Smyth, C Everitt
Stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) can delay escalation to systemic treatment in men with oligometastatic prostate cancer (PCa). However, large, prospective studies are still required to evaluate the efficacy of this approach in different patient groups. This is the interim analysis of a prospective, single institution study of men relapsing with up to five synchronous lesions following definitive local treatment for primary PCa. Our aim was to determine the proportion of patients not requiring treatment escalation following SBRT. In total, 199 patients were enrolled to receive fractionated SBRT (50 Gray in 10 fractions) to each visible lesion. Fourteen patients were castration resistant at enrolment. The proportion of patients not requiring treatment escalation 2 years following SBRT was 51.7% (95% CI: 44.1–59.3%). The median length of treatment escalation-free survival over the entire follow-up period was 27.1 months (95% CI; 21.8–29.4 months). Prior androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) predicted a significantly lower rate of freedom from treatment escalation at 2 years compared to no prior ADT (odds ratio = 0.21, 95% CI: 0.08–0.54, p = 0.001). There was no difference in the efficacy of SBRT when treating 4–5 vs. 1–3 initial lesions. A prostate-specific antigen (PSA) decline was induced in 75% of patients, with PSA readings falling to an undetectable level in six patients. No late grade three toxicities were observed. These interim results suggest that SBRT can be used to treat up to five synchronous PCa oligometastases to delay treatment escalation.

History

Journal

International journal of cancer

Volume

146

Pagination

161-168

Location

Chichester, Eng.

ISSN

0020-7136

eISSN

1097-0215

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

1

Publisher

Wiley

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