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The role of hypofractionated radiotherapy for the definitive treatment of localized prostate cancer: early results of a randomized trial

Authors :
Konstantina Boniou
Haidong Huang
Konstantinos Romanidis
Iason Nikolaos-Katsios
Aikaterini Amaniti
Qiang Li
Dimitris Giannakidis
Wolfgang Hohenforst-Schmidt
Aris Ioannidis
Konstantinos Sapalidis
Savvas Petanidis
Panagoula Oinkonomou
Charilaos Koulouris
Isaak Kesisoglou
Anastasios Vagionas
Sotirios Karatzoglou
Varbara Fyntanidou
Ioannis Tzitzikas
Paul Zarogoulidis
Zoi Aidoini
Christoforos Kosmidis
Ioannis Chrisogonidis
Athanasios Katsaounis
Elena Maragouli
Nikolaos V. Michalopoulos
Dimitris Dragoumis
Petros Alexidis
Konstantinos Drevelegas
Konstantinos Hatzimouratidis
Source :
Journal of Cancer
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Ivyspring International Publisher, 2019.

Abstract

Background: Prostate cancer is considered to have a special biology which could affect the radiation therapy result based on the selected fractionation scheme. We present the preliminary results of a randomized trial comparing conventionally and hypofractionated radiation therapy for prostate cancer. Methods: Patients included in the study had localized prostate cancer (cT1c-T3bN0M0) and were randomly assigned to mild hypofractionated (72 Gy in 32 fractions, arm1) or conventionally fractionated (74 Gy in 37 fractions, arm2) radiation therapy treatment with Volumetric Arc Therapy technique. The treatment was delivered only to the prostate with or without the seminal vesicles according to physician's discretion and hormone therapy was optional according to the disease stage and comorbidities. Here we present the preliminary results of acute toxicity from the gastrointestinal (GI) and genitourinary (GU) system. Results: Between 2015 and 2016, 139 patients were enrolled. 67 patients were treated with conventional fractionation and 72 were treated with hypofractionation. Gradeā‰„ 2 toxicity from GU and GI was observed in 23 and 21 patients (31,9% vs 31,3%, p=0,79) and 15 and 12 (20,8% vs 17,9%, p=0,6) for arm1 and arm2 respectively. No statistically significant differences were observed between arms in the incidence of early toxicity. There was no correlation observed between patient characteristics and toxicity from either GU or GI. Conclusions: Hypofractionated radiotherapy appears to be equally tolerated compared to conventional fractionation in the early setting. Longer follow up is needed to assess the late toxicity profile of the patients and any potential differences between the control and experimental arm.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
18379664
Volume :
10
Issue :
25
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....65ae6e2344f7365a2d453460f5c8c484