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Ultrahypofractionation of localized prostate cancer

Authors :
Arndt-Christian Müller
Constantinos Zamboglou
Pirus Ghadjar
Thomas Wiegel
Stefan Höcht
Daniel Zips
Michael Pinkawa
Frank Wolf
Ute Ganswindt
Tobias Hölscher
Clemens Albrecht
Nina-Sophie Schmidt-Hegemann
Daniel M. Aebersold
Peter Niehoff
Dirk Böhmer
Felix Sedlmayer
Michael Flentje
Source :
Wolf, Frank; Sedlmayer, Felix; Aebersold, Daniel; Albrecht, Clemens; Böhmer, Dirk; Flentje, Michael; Ganswindt, Ute; Ghadjar, Pirus; Höcht, Stefan; Hölscher, Tobias; Müller, Arndt-Christian; Niehoff, Peter; Pinkawa, Michael; Schmidt-Hegemann, Nina-Sophie; Zamboglou, Constantinos; Zips, Daniel; Wiegel, Thomas (2021). Ultrahypofractionation of localized prostate cancer : Statement from the DEGRO working group prostate cancer. Strahlentherapie und Onkologie, 197(2), pp. 89-96. Springer 10.1007/s00066-020-01723-8
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2020.

Abstract

Due to its low fractionation sensitivity, also known as “alpha/beta ratio,” in relation to its surrounding organs at risk, prostate cancer is predestined for hypofractionated radiation schedules assuming an increased therapeutic ratio compared to normofractionated regimens. While moderate hypofractionation (2.2–4 Gy) has been proven to be non-inferior to normal fractionation in several large randomized trials for localized prostate cancer, level I evidence for ultrahypofractionation (>4 Gy) was lacking until recently. An accumulating body of non-randomized evidence has recently been strengthened by the publication of two randomized studies comparing ultrahypofractionation with a normofractionated schedule, i.e., the Scandinavian HYPO-RT trial by Widmark et al. and the first toxicity results of the PACE‑B trial. In this review, we aim to give a brief overview of the current evidence of ultrahypofractionation, make an overall assessment of the level of evidence, and provide recommendations and requirements that should be followed before introducing ultrahypofractionation into routine clinical use.

Details

ISSN :
1439099X and 01797158
Volume :
197
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Strahlentherapie und Onkologie
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....99839e623a9b10bd514dd9f4dc5ff301