Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/1/2805
Title: Avoiding prostate bed radiation for the PSMA-PET detected nodal recurrence patient post prostatectomy
Authors: Challis, Benjamin;Kneebone, Andrew ;Eade, Thomas ;Guo, Lesley;Atyeo, John;Brown, Chris;Hruby, George
Affliation: Central Coast Local Health District
Gosford Hospital
Issue Date: Jan-2025
Source: 50, 2025,100896
Journal title: Clinical and translational radiation oncology
Department: Radiation Oncology
Abstract: Background Nodal only recurrence post radical prostatectomy (RP) is increasingly recognised in the PSMA scan era. Management is controversial with a curative approach usually incorporating prostate bed and nodal irradiation (PB + NRT) in combination with long-term hormonal therapy. It is unknown whether omitting prostate-bed irradiation (PBRT) is safe in a subgroup of these patients. Purpose To document the outcomes for pelvic nodal only salvage radiation therapy (NRT) plus concurrent androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) for patients with PSMA PET documented nodal relapses. Methods and materials Eligible patients included PSMA PET documented nodal only relapses post RP who received NRT with or without PBRT at Royal North Shore Hospital (NSCC), Gosford Hospital (CCCC) or Genesis Care (GC) between January 2015 and December 2021. Baseline demographics, surgical pathology, radiation details, ADT use and outcomes were documented. Results Forty-six patients were identified, 22 in the PB + NRT cohort and 24 in the NRT cohort. Compared to the PBRT + NRT group, the NRT cohort had lower stage disease (pT2 = 7 (29 %), pT3a = 15 (63 %), pT3b = 1 (4 %) vs pT2 = 0, pT3a = 10 (45 %), pT3b = 12 (55 %)) (p=<0.001) and lower rates of R1 resection (0 % vs 63.6 % (n = 14)) (p < 0.001) respectively. The median follow-up from radiotherapy was 3.9 years. Four-year biochemical failure- free survival (BFFS) was 64 % in the NRT group vs 67 % in the PB + NRT group. Of the ten (41.6 %) failures in the NRT group, 1 (4 %) was a biochemical failure only, 2 (8 %) recurred in the PB and received further salvage treatment, 4 (17 %) had nodal failure outside the pelvis and 3 (13 %) had distant metastases. One patient (4 %) in the NRT group recorded late grade ≥2 GU toxicity compared with 7 (32 %) in the PB + NRT. No patients in the NRT group recorded late grade ≥2 GI toxicity compared with 2 (9 %) in the PB + NRT cohort. Conclusion This study provides early evidence for the feasibility of PBRT sparing to avoid local toxicity. Most patients in this cohort failed distantly. This data suggests that for selected men PB-avoidance may be considered given informed consent.
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/1/2805
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ctro.2024.100896
Publicaton type: Journal Article
Keywords: Cancer
Radiology
Appears in Collections:Health Service Research

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