학술논문

A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis of Local Salvage Therapies After Radiotherapy for Prostate Cancer (MASTER)
Document Type
article
Source
European Urology. 80(3)
Subject
Cancer
Urologic Diseases
Prostate Cancer
Clinical Research
Brachytherapy
Cryotherapy
High-Intensity Focused Ultrasound Ablation
Humans
Male
Neoplasm Recurrence
Local
Prospective Studies
Prostatectomy
Prostatic Neoplasms
Radiation Dosage
Radiosurgery
Salvage Therapy
Meta-analysis
Prostate cancer
Radiorecurrent prostate cancer
Radiation therapy
Salvage therapy
Radical prostatectomy
High-intensity focused
ultrasound
High-dose-rate brachytherapy
High-intensity focused ultrasound
Low–dose-rate brachytherapy
Stereotactic body radiotherapy
Clinical Sciences
Urology & Nephrology
Language
Abstract
ContextManagement of locally recurrent prostate cancer after definitive radiotherapy remains controversial due to the perceived high rates of severe genitourinary (GU) and gastrointestinal (GI) toxicity associated with any local salvage modality.ObjectiveTo quantitatively compare the efficacy and toxicity of salvage radical prostatectomy (RP), high-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU), cryotherapy, stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT), low-dose-rate (LDR) brachytherapy, and high-dose-rate (HDR) brachytherapy.Evidence acquisitionWe performed a systematic review of PubMed, EMBASE, and MEDLINE. Two- and 5-yr recurrence-free survival (RFS) rates and crude incidences of severe GU and GI toxicity were extracted as endpoints of interest. Random-effect meta-analyses were conducted to characterize summary effect sizes and quantify heterogeneity. Estimates for each modality were then compared with RP after adjusting for individual study-level covariates using mixed-effect regression models, while allowing for differences in between-study variance across treatment modalities.Evidence synthesisA total of 150 studies were included for analysis. There was significant heterogeneity between studies within each modality, and covariates differed between modalities, necessitating adjustment. Adjusted 5-yr RFS ranged from 50% after cryotherapy to 60% after HDR brachytherapy and SBRT, with no significant differences between any modality and RP. Severe GU toxicity was significantly lower with all three forms of radiotherapeutic salvage than with RP (adjusted rates of 20% after RP vs 5.6%, 9.6%, and 9.1% after SBRT, HDR brachytherapy, and LDR brachytherapy, respectively; p ≤ 0.001 for all). Severe GI toxicity was significantly lower with HDR salvage than with RP (adjusted rates 1.8% vs 0.0%, p