The early toxicity of escalated versus standard dose conformal radiotherapy with neo-adjuvant androgen suppression for patients with localised prostate cancer: Results from the MRC RT01 trial (ISRCTN47772397)

被引:53
作者
Dearnaley, David P. [1 ]
Sydes, Matthew R.
Langley, Ruth E.
Graham, John D.
Huddart, Robert A.
Syndikus, Isabel
Matthews, John H. L.
Scrase, Christopher D.
Jose, Chakiath C.
Logue, John
Stephens, Richard J.
机构
[1] Inst Canc Res, Sutton SM5 2PT, Surrey, England
[2] Royal Marsden Hosp, Sutton SM5 2PT, Surrey, England
[3] MRC, Clin Trials Unit, Canc Grp, London, England
[4] Univ Glasgow, Western Infirm, Beatson Oncol Ctr, Glasgow G11 6NT, Lanark, Scotland
[5] Clatterbridge Ctr Oncol, Wirral, Merseyside, England
[6] Auckland Hosp, Auckland, New Zealand
[7] Ipswich Hosp, Ipswich, Suffolk, England
[8] Christie Hosp, Manchester, Lancs, England
基金
英国医学研究理事会;
关键词
prostate cancer; phase III trial; conformal radiotherapy; dose escalation; radiation toxicity;
D O I
10.1016/j.radonc.2007.02.014
中图分类号
R73 [肿瘤学];
学科分类号
100214 ;
摘要
Background: Five-year disease-free survival rates for localised prostate cancer following standard doses of conventional radical external beam radiotherapy are around 80%. Conformal radiotherapy (CFRT) raises the possibility that radiotherapy doses can be increased and long-term efficacy outcomes improved, with safety an important consideration. Methods: MRC RT01 is a randomised controlled trial of 862 men with localised prostate cancer comparing Standard CFRT (64 Gy/32 f) versus Escalated CFRT (74 Gy/37 f), both administered with neo-adjuvant androgen suppression. Early toxicity was measured using physician-reported instruments (RTOG, LENT/SOM, Royal Marsden Scales) and patient-reported questionnaires (MOS SF-36, UCLA Prostate Cancer Index, FACT-P). Results: Overall early radiotherapy toxicity was similar, apart from increased bladder, bowel and sexual toxicity, in the Escalated Group during a short immediate post-radiotherapy period. Toxicity in both groups had abated by week 12. Using RTOG Acute Toxicity scores, cumulative Grade >= 2 bladder and bowel toxicity was 38% and 30% for Standard Group and 39% and 33% in Escalated Group, respectively. Urinary frequency (Royal Marsden Scale) improved in both groups from pre-androgen suppression to 6 months post-radiotherapy (p < 0.001), but bowel and sexual functioning deteriorated. This pattern was supported by patient-completed assessments. Six months after starting radiotherapy the incidence of RTOG Grade >= 2 side-effects was low (< 1%); but there were six reports of rectal ulceration (6 Escalated Group), six haematuria (5 Escalated Group) and eight urethral stricture (6 Escalated Group). Conclusions: The two CFRT schedules with neo-adjuvant androgen suppression have broadly similar early toxicity profiles except for the immediate post-RT period. At 6 months and compared to before hormone therapy, bladder symptoms improved, whereas bowel and sexual symptoms worsened. These assessments of early treatment safety will be complemented by further follow-up to document late side-effects and efficacy. Crown Copyright (c) 2007 Published by Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:31 / 41
页数:11
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