Multi-institutional analysis of long-term outcome for stages T1-T2 prostate cancer treated with permanent seed implantation Journal Article


Authors: Zelefsky, M. J.; Kuban, D. A.; Levy, L. B.; Potters, L.; Beyer, D. C.; Blasko, J. C.; Moran, B. J.; Ciezki, J. P.; Zietman, A. L.; Pisansky, T. M.; Elshaikh, M.; Horwitz, E. M.
Article Title: Multi-institutional analysis of long-term outcome for stages T1-T2 prostate cancer treated with permanent seed implantation
Abstract: Purpose: To assess long-term prostate-specific antigen (PSA) outcome after permanent prostate brachytherapy (BT) and identify predictors of improved disease-free survival. Methods and Materials: Eleven institutions combined data on 2,693 patients treated with permanent interstitial BT monotherapy for T1-T2 prostate cancer. Of these patients, 1,831 (68%) were treated with I-125 (median dose, 144 Gy) and 862 (32%) were treated with Pd-103 (median dose, 130 Gy). Criteria for inclusion were: available pre-BT PSA, BT ≥5 years before data submission, BT between 1988-1998, and no androgen deprivation before failure. The median follow-up was 63 months. Results: Among patients where the I-125 dose to 90% of the prostate (D90) was ≥130 Gy, the 8-year PSA relapse-free survival (PRFS) was 93% compared with 76% for those with lower D90 dose levels (p < 0.001). A multivariable analysis identified tumor stage (p = 0.002), Gleason score (p < 0.001), pretreatment PSA level (p < 0.001), treatment year (p = 0.001), and the isotope used (p = 0.004) as pretreatment and treatment variables associated with PRFS. When restricted to patients with available postimplantation dosimetric information, D90 emerged as a significant predictor of biochemical outcome (p = 0.01), and isotope was not significant. The 8-year PRFS was 92%, 86%, 79%, and 67%, respectively, for patients with PSA nadir values of 0-0.49, 0.5-0.99, 1.0-1.99, and >2.0 ng/mL (p < 0.001). Among patients free of biochemical relapse at 8 years, the median nadir level was 0.1 ng/mL, and 90% of these patients achieved a nadir PSA level <0.6 ng/mL. Conclusions: Outcome after permanent BT for prostatic cancer relates to tumor stage, Gleason score, pretreatment PSA, BT year, and post-BT dosimetric quality. PSA nadir ≤0.5 ng/mL was particularly associated with durable long-term PSA disease-free survival. The only controllable factor to impact on long-term outcome was the D90 which is a reflection of implant quality. © 2007 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Keywords: survival; treatment outcome; disease-free survival; major clinical study; cancer staging; follow up; isotopes; prostate specific antigen; radiotherapy dosage; prediction; prostate cancer; gleason score; prostate-specific antigen; prostatic neoplasms; antigens; iodine radioisotopes; tumors; dosimetry; brachytherapy; multivariate analysis; patient treatment; radioisotopes; isotope; palladium; biomedical engineering; prostate carcinoma; dose; biochemical outcome; implants (surgical)
Journal Title: International Journal of Radiation Oncology, Biology, Physics
Volume: 67
Issue: 2
ISSN: 0360-3016
Publisher: Elsevier Inc.  
Date Published: 2007-02-01
Start Page: 327
End Page: 333
Language: English
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijrobp.2006.08.056
PUBMED: 17084558
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Cited By (since 1996): 126" - "Export Date: 17 November 2011" - "CODEN: IOBPD" - "Source: Scopus"
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  1. Michael J Zelefsky
    754 Zelefsky