The effect of prognostic factors on therapeutic outcome following transperineal prostate brachytherapy
โ Scribed by Richard G. Stock; Nelson N. Stone
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1997
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 69 KB
- Volume
- 13
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 8756-0437
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
The objectives of this study were to examine the effect of both disease and treatment related prognostic factors on biochemical control and post-treatment biopsy. Two-hundred fifty-eight patients underwent interactive ultrasound guided transperineal prostate implantation for T1-T2 prostate cancer using Iodine-125 (139 patients) and Palladium-103 (119 patients) and were followed from 6-67 months (median, 19). Hormonal therapy with 3 months of leuprolide and flutamide prior to implantation and two months given after the implant was used in 96 patients. Pre-treatment prostate-specific antigen (PSA) had the most significant effect on biochemical failure. Freedom from biochemical failure (FFBF) rates at 4 years were 75% for patients with PSA 1.3-10 ng/ml (144), 74% for patients with PSA 10.1-20 ng/ml (73), and 34% for patients with PSA > 20 ng/ml (41) (P = 0.0004). Gleason score also had a significant effect on FFBF rates. Four-year rates were 81%, 65% and 47% for patients with scores of 2-4 (68), 5-6 (130), and > or = 7 respectively (60) (P = 0.01). These two factors were also significant in multivariate analysis (P = 0.002, 0.007, respectively). Gleason score was the only factor to significantly affect post-treatment biopsy results. Patients with scores of 2-6 had 85% (63/ 74) negative 2-year biopsies versus 62% (13/21) for patients with scores > or = 7 (P = 0.02). Low-risk patients (PSA < or = 10 ng/ml, scores < 7 and stage < T2a) had a 4-year FFBF rate of 88% as compared to 60% for high-risk patients (PSA > 10 ng/ml, score > 6 or stage > or = T2b) (P = 0.02) and had a 95% negative biopsy rate versus 76% for high-risk patients (P = 0.06). Low-risk patients demonstrate high FFBF and negative biopsy rates following implantation. Patients presenting with higher risk prognostic factors such as PSA > 20 ng/ml or Gleason scores > or = 7 may require more aggressive treatment regimens.
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