Yong-Hyub Kim , Jae-Uk Jeong , Jung-Ho Yang , Taek-Keun Nam , Ju-Young Song , Mee Sun Yoon , Shinhaeng Cho , Sung-Ja Ahn
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background and purpose
This study aimed to compare the oncologic outcomes of definitive intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) between younger and older high- or very-high-risk prostate cancer patients using propensity score matching (PSM) and competing risk analysis (CRA).
Materials and methods
A total of 569 patients were included in this analysis: 265 younger than 75 years (Group A) and 304 aged 75 years or above (Group B). All patients received IMRT with a daily fraction of 2.2 Gy, administered over 34 fractions, resulting in a total dose of 74.8 Gy. The primary outcomes included biochemical-failure-free survival (BCFFS), distant-metastasis-free survival (DMFS), clinical-failure-free survival (CFFS), cancer-specific survival (CSS), and overall survival (OS). PSM was used to balance the groups, employing a full matching method, while CRA distinguished between cancer-specific events and non-cancer-specific events.
Results
Before PSM, the 7-year BCFFS, DMFS, CFFS, CSS, and OS rates in Groups A and B were 83.0 % vs. 66.7 % (p = 0.011), 84.1 % vs. 68.0 % (p = 0.002), 82.1 % vs. 66.7 % (p = 0.008), 95.6 % vs. 97.3 % (p = 0.704), and 87.4 % vs. 68.6 % (p < 0.001), respectively. After PSM, the 7-year survival rates were comparable between both groups for all outcomes except OS. CRA revealed that cancer-specific events were more frequent in Group A, whereas non-cancer-specific events predominated in Group B.
Conclusions
Both PSM and CRA indicated that definitive IMRT can be safely and effectively delivered to older patients with high- or very high-risk prostate cancer, achieving oncologic outcomes comparable to those in younger patients.
期刊介绍:
Radiotherapy and Oncology publishes papers describing original research as well as review articles. It covers areas of interest relating to radiation oncology. This includes: clinical radiotherapy, combined modality treatment, translational studies, epidemiological outcomes, imaging, dosimetry, and radiation therapy planning, experimental work in radiobiology, chemobiology, hyperthermia and tumour biology, as well as data science in radiation oncology and physics aspects relevant to oncology.Papers on more general aspects of interest to the radiation oncologist including chemotherapy, surgery and immunology are also published.