1. Extended nodal radiotherapy for prostate cancer relapse guided with [11C]-choline PET/CT: ten-year results in patients enrolled in a prospective trial.
- Author
-
Fodor, A., Brombin, C., Deantoni, C. L., Giannini, L., Ferrario, F., Villa, S. L., Mangili, P., Rancoita, P. M. V., Cozzarini, C., Picchio, M., Del Vecchio, A., Fiorino, C., Di Serio, M. C. S., Chiti, A., and Di Muzio, N. G.
- Subjects
CANCER relapse ,POSITRON emission tomography ,CHOLINE ,PROSTATE cancer ,ANDROGEN deprivation therapy ,CANCER radiotherapy ,DISEASE relapse - Abstract
Aims: To report long-term outcomes of relapsed prostate cancer (PC) patients treated in a prospective single-arm study with extended–nodal radiotherapy (ENRT) and [11C]-choline positron emission tomography (PET)/computed tomography (CT)-guided simultaneous integrated boost (SIB) to positive lymph nodes (LNs). Methods: From 12/2009 to 04/2015, 60 PC patients with biochemical relapse and positive LNs only were treated in this study. ENRT at a median total dose (TD) = 51.8 Gy/28 fr and PET/CT-guided SIB to positive LNs at a median TD = 65.5 Gy was prescribed. Median PSA at relapse was 2.3 (interquartile range, IQR:1.3–4.0) ng/ml. Median number of positive LNs: 2 (range: 1–18). Androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) was prescribed for 48 patients for a median of 30.7 (IQR: 18.5–43.1) months. Results: Median follow-up from the end of salvage treatment was 121.8 (IQR: 116.1, 130.9) months; 3-, 5-, and 10-year BRFS were 45.0%, 36.0%, and 24.0%, respectively; DMFS: 67.9%, 57.2%, and 45.2%; CRFS: 62.9%, 53.9%, and 42.0%; and OS: 88.2%, 76.3%, and 47.9%, respectively. Castration resistance (p < 0.0001) and ≥ 6 positive LN (p = 0.0024) significantly influenced OS at multivariate analysis. Castration resistance (p < 0.0001 for both) influenced DMFS and CRFS in multivariate analysis. Conclusions: In PC relapsed patients treated with ENRT and [11C]-choline-PET/CT-guided SIB for positive LNs, with 10-year follow-up, a median Kaplan–Meier estimate CRFS of 67 months and OS of 110 months were obtained. These highly favorable results should be confirmed in a prospective, randomized trial. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF