Martin T. King MD, PhD , Michelle Svatos PhD , Erik W. Chell PhD , Vadim Pigrish MMP , Katie Miller MS , Daniel A. Low PhD , Peter F. Orio III DO, MS
{"title":"评估前列腺低分割放疗前透明质酸对根尖间距生活质量的影响:一项次要分析。","authors":"Martin T. King MD, PhD , Michelle Svatos PhD , Erik W. Chell PhD , Vadim Pigrish MMP , Katie Miller MS , Daniel A. Low PhD , Peter F. Orio III DO, MS","doi":"10.1016/j.prro.2023.11.010","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div><h3>Purpose</h3><p>Recently, a randomized trial demonstrated that a hyaluronic acid (HA) spacer placed before prostate hypofractionated intensity modulated radiation therapy improved rectal dosimetry and reduced acute grade 2+ gastrointestinal toxicity. However, 26.5% of patients receiving the spacer experienced a minimal clinically important decline (MCID) in bowel quality-of-life (QOL). The purpose of this study is to evaluate whether certain characteristics of the rectal spacer, as determined on postimplant imaging, were associated with change in bowel QOL at 3-months.</p></div><div><h3>Methods and Materials</h3><p>This is a secondary analysis of the 136 patients who received the HA spacer on the randomized trial. Postimplant spacer characteristics (ie, prostate-rectum spacing at superior/midgland/inferior/apex planes, symmetry, prostate volume, spacer volume) were systematically analyzed from structure sets using custom software code. Characteristics demonstrating significant associations with rectal V30 on multivariate linear regression were identified. Linear regression models were used to analyze the associations of such characteristics with change (baseline to 3 months) in both bowel and urinary QOL.</p></div><div><h3>Results</h3><p>Apical spacing (mean 9.4 (standard deviation 4.0)) was significantly smaller than spacing measurements at more superior planes. 95.6% of patients had a symmetrical implant. Apical spacing (<em>P</em> < .001) and prostate volume (<em>P</em> = .01) were significantly associated with rectal V30 on multivariate analysis. However, only apical spacing (0.38/mm; <em>P</em> = .01) was associated with change in bowel QOL, even with adjustment of baseline bowel score (-0.33; <em>P</em> < .01). Percentages of patients with bowel MCID were 14.8% for >= 10 mm versus 36.6% for <10 mm apical spacing (<em>P</em> = .01). Apical spacing was not associated with change in urinary QOL (-0.09; <em>P</em> = .72), when adjusted for baseline urinary QOL (-0.52; <em>P</em> < .01).</p></div><div><h3>Conclusions</h3><p>Greater apical spacing was associated with improved rectal dosimetry and smaller decline in bowel QOL at 3-months. Further prospective data are needed to fully understand the ramifications of increased apical spacing.</p></div>","PeriodicalId":54245,"journal":{"name":"Practical Radiation Oncology","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":3.4000,"publicationDate":"2024-05-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1879850023003387/pdfft?md5=462ddb4e11a79a8e628584d80f89b48b&pid=1-s2.0-S1879850023003387-main.pdf","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Evaluating the Quality-of-Life Effect of Apical Spacing with Hyaluronic Acid Prior to Hypofractionated Prostate Radiation Therapy: A Secondary Analysis\",\"authors\":\"Martin T. King MD, PhD , Michelle Svatos PhD , Erik W. Chell PhD , Vadim Pigrish MMP , Katie Miller MS , Daniel A. Low PhD , Peter F. Orio III DO, MS\",\"doi\":\"10.1016/j.prro.2023.11.010\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<div><h3>Purpose</h3><p>Recently, a randomized trial demonstrated that a hyaluronic acid (HA) spacer placed before prostate hypofractionated intensity modulated radiation therapy improved rectal dosimetry and reduced acute grade 2+ gastrointestinal toxicity. However, 26.5% of patients receiving the spacer experienced a minimal clinically important decline (MCID) in bowel quality-of-life (QOL). The purpose of this study is to evaluate whether certain characteristics of the rectal spacer, as determined on postimplant imaging, were associated with change in bowel QOL at 3-months.</p></div><div><h3>Methods and Materials</h3><p>This is a secondary analysis of the 136 patients who received the HA spacer on the randomized trial. Postimplant spacer characteristics (ie, prostate-rectum spacing at superior/midgland/inferior/apex planes, symmetry, prostate volume, spacer volume) were systematically analyzed from structure sets using custom software code. Characteristics demonstrating significant associations with rectal V30 on multivariate linear regression were identified. Linear regression models were used to analyze the associations of such characteristics with change (baseline to 3 months) in both bowel and urinary QOL.</p></div><div><h3>Results</h3><p>Apical spacing (mean 9.4 (standard deviation 4.0)) was significantly smaller than spacing measurements at more superior planes. 95.6% of patients had a symmetrical implant. Apical spacing (<em>P</em> < .001) and prostate volume (<em>P</em> = .01) were significantly associated with rectal V30 on multivariate analysis. However, only apical spacing (0.38/mm; <em>P</em> = .01) was associated with change in bowel QOL, even with adjustment of baseline bowel score (-0.33; <em>P</em> < .01). Percentages of patients with bowel MCID were 14.8% for >= 10 mm versus 36.6% for <10 mm apical spacing (<em>P</em> = .01). Apical spacing was not associated with change in urinary QOL (-0.09; <em>P</em> = .72), when adjusted for baseline urinary QOL (-0.52; <em>P</em> < .01).</p></div><div><h3>Conclusions</h3><p>Greater apical spacing was associated with improved rectal dosimetry and smaller decline in bowel QOL at 3-months. 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Evaluating the Quality-of-Life Effect of Apical Spacing with Hyaluronic Acid Prior to Hypofractionated Prostate Radiation Therapy: A Secondary Analysis
Purpose
Recently, a randomized trial demonstrated that a hyaluronic acid (HA) spacer placed before prostate hypofractionated intensity modulated radiation therapy improved rectal dosimetry and reduced acute grade 2+ gastrointestinal toxicity. However, 26.5% of patients receiving the spacer experienced a minimal clinically important decline (MCID) in bowel quality-of-life (QOL). The purpose of this study is to evaluate whether certain characteristics of the rectal spacer, as determined on postimplant imaging, were associated with change in bowel QOL at 3-months.
Methods and Materials
This is a secondary analysis of the 136 patients who received the HA spacer on the randomized trial. Postimplant spacer characteristics (ie, prostate-rectum spacing at superior/midgland/inferior/apex planes, symmetry, prostate volume, spacer volume) were systematically analyzed from structure sets using custom software code. Characteristics demonstrating significant associations with rectal V30 on multivariate linear regression were identified. Linear regression models were used to analyze the associations of such characteristics with change (baseline to 3 months) in both bowel and urinary QOL.
Results
Apical spacing (mean 9.4 (standard deviation 4.0)) was significantly smaller than spacing measurements at more superior planes. 95.6% of patients had a symmetrical implant. Apical spacing (P < .001) and prostate volume (P = .01) were significantly associated with rectal V30 on multivariate analysis. However, only apical spacing (0.38/mm; P = .01) was associated with change in bowel QOL, even with adjustment of baseline bowel score (-0.33; P < .01). Percentages of patients with bowel MCID were 14.8% for >= 10 mm versus 36.6% for <10 mm apical spacing (P = .01). Apical spacing was not associated with change in urinary QOL (-0.09; P = .72), when adjusted for baseline urinary QOL (-0.52; P < .01).
Conclusions
Greater apical spacing was associated with improved rectal dosimetry and smaller decline in bowel QOL at 3-months. Further prospective data are needed to fully understand the ramifications of increased apical spacing.
期刊介绍:
The overarching mission of Practical Radiation Oncology is to improve the quality of radiation oncology practice. PRO''s purpose is to document the state of current practice, providing background for those in training and continuing education for practitioners, through discussion and illustration of new techniques, evaluation of current practices, and publication of case reports. PRO strives to provide its readers content that emphasizes knowledge "with a purpose." The content of PRO includes:
Original articles focusing on patient safety, quality measurement, or quality improvement initiatives
Original articles focusing on imaging, contouring, target delineation, simulation, treatment planning, immobilization, organ motion, and other practical issues
ASTRO guidelines, position papers, and consensus statements
Essays that highlight enriching personal experiences in caring for cancer patients and their families.