Long-term outcome after definitive photon vs. combined proton/photon irradiation for prostate cancer
Stefan Alexander Koerber,
Germany
PD-0408
Abstract
Long-term outcome after definitive photon vs. combined proton/photon irradiation for prostate cancer
Authors: Stefan Alexander Koerber1, Kate-Jessica Ebel1, Rebecca Lotsch1, Jonas Ristau1, Christoph A. Fink1, Fabian Schunn1, Ingmar Schlampp1, Johanna Rademacher1, Tim Holland-Letz2, Semi B. Harrabi1, Juergen Debus1, Klaus Herfarth1
1Heidelberg University Hospital, Department of Radiation Oncology, Heidelberg, Germany; 2German Cancer Research Center, Department of Biostatistics, Heidelberg, Germany
Show Affiliations
Hide Affiliations
Purpose or Objective
Due to their physical characteristics, protons have a great potential to
treat patients with prostate cancer. While reduced toxicity, improved outcome
and cost-effectiveness have been discussed, there is a lack of robust clinical
data so far. Thus, the debate in treating early prostate cancer with proton
beam therapy is still active. Therefore, the current study aimed to analyze long-term
outcome of a large cohort of prostate cancer patients treated with either
photons or photons and protons.
Material and Methods
For this retrospective study, we included 549 men with stage T1-T3 N0 M0
treatment-naïve prostate cancer irradiated at our department in the period from
2010 to 2019. Patients received either conventional photon-based intensity-modulated
radiotherapy with daily image guidance (IMRT/IGRT) (CT cohort) or combined
photon radiotherapy with a proton boost using active raster scanning technique
(PT cohort). Acute and late adverse events were evaluated according to CTCAE
criteria and quality of life according to QLQ-C30 and -PR25 questionnaire.
Further endpoints were overall survival (OS) and biochemical progression-free
survival (bPFS). For statistical analyses we used the log-rank and chi-squared
test.
Results
The CT cohort consisted of 398 men while 151 patients were included in
the PT group. Both cohorts were well-balanced, most patients were classified as
intermediate-risk according to d’Amico risk classification (68.3% for CT vs.
70.2% for PT). Median follow-up was 58.9 months for the photon group and 49.0
months for the group with a proton boost. There were no statistically
significant differences regarding clinical outcome with a 5- and 10-year
overall survival of 92.5% vs. 93.7% and 69.6% vs. 77.5% (CT vs. PT). 5- and
10-year biochemical progression-free survival (bPFS) were 90.0% and 57.1% for
the photon group and 84.9% and 50.2% for the proton boost cohort, respectively.
During treatment, there was a higher risk for gastrointestinal (GI) toxicity
for some items (e.g. grade 2 rectal urgency: 6.1% vs. 0.7%), however, these
differences disappeared during long-term follow-up. The global quality of life
at the time of the last follow-up demonstrated no statistically significant
difference between both groups with a mean score of 70.7 (SD 21.2) for the CT and
70.6 (SD 21.9) for the PT cohort.
Conclusion
Our findings obtained from a large cohort confirmed the long-term
efficacy of definitive irradiation of patients with treatment-naïve prostate
cancer using a proton boost. However, these results also suggest that there was
no considerable decrease of toxicity when compared to conventional photon
irradiation. Thus, data from prospective randomized trials like the phase III randomized
clinical trial of proton therapy versus IMRT for low or intermediate risk prostate
cancer (NCT01617161) are highly expected.