1. Physician reported toxicities and patient reported quality of life of transperineal ultrasound-guided radiotherapy of prostate cancer
- Author
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Jing Ma, Paul Rogowski, Christian Trapp, Farkhad Manapov, Bin Xu, Alexander Buchner, Shun Lu, Nina Sophie Schmidt-Hegemann, Xuanbin Wang, Cheng Zhou, Christian Stief, Claus Belka, and Minglun Li
- Subjects
Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Purpose: This study aims to address therapy-related toxicities and quality of life in prostate cancer patients undergoing transperineal ultrasound (TPUS) guided radiotherapy (RT). Methods: Acute and late gastrointestinal (GI) and genitourinary (GU) toxicities were assessed by physicians using CTCAE v5.0. Patient-reported quality of life outcomes were evaluated using EORTC QLQ-C30, -PR25 and IPSS. We utilized Volumetric Modulated Arc Therapy (VMAT) or intensity modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) as the RT technique for this study. The assessments were carried out before RT, at RT end, 3 months after RT and subsequently at 1-year intervals. Prostate-specific antigen (PSA) was also evaluated at each follow-up. Results: In this study, a total of 164 patients were enrolled, while among them, 112 patients delivered quality-of-life data in a prospective evaluation. The median pre-treatment PSA was 7.9 ng/mL (range: 1.8–169 ng/ml). At the median follow-up of 19 months (3–82 months), the median PSA decreased to 0.22 ng/ml. Acute grade II GI and GU toxicities occurred in 8.6 % and 21.5 % patients at RT end. Regarding late toxicities, 2.2 % patients experienced grade II GI toxicities at 27 months and only one patient at 51 months, whereas no grade II GU late toxicities were reported at these time points. Quality of life scores also indicated a well-tolerated treatment. Patients mainly experienced acute clinically relevant symptoms of fatigue, pain, as well as deterioration in bowel and urinary symptoms. However, most symptoms normalized at 3 months and remained stable thereafter. Overall functioning showed a similar decline at RT end but improved over time. Conclusion: The outcomes of TPUS-guided RT demonstrated promising results in terms of minimal physician-reported toxicities and satisfactory patient-reported QoL.
- Published
- 2024
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