• Urology · Apr 2009

    Population-based study of biochemical and survival outcomes after permanent 125I brachytherapy for low- and intermediate-risk prostate cancer.

    • W J Morris, M Keyes, D Palma, I Spadinger, M R McKenzie, A Agranovich, T Pickles, M Liu, W Kwan, J Wu, E Berthelet, and H Pai.
    • British Columbia Cancer Centre, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. jmorris@bccancer.bc.ca
    • Urology. 2009 Apr 1; 73 (4): 860-5; discussion 865-7.

    ObjectivesTo analyze the biochemical and survival outcomes after permanent low-dose-rate prostate brachytherapy in a large, consecutive, population-based cohort of patients.MethodsA total of 1006 consecutive implants were performed from July 20, 1998 to October 23, 2003 for men with low-risk and "low-tier" intermediate-risk prostate cancer. The prescribed minimal peripheral dose was 144 Gy, using 0.33 mCi (125)I sources and a preplan technique with a strong posterior-peripheral dose bias. Most patients (65%) had received 6 months of androgen deprivation therapy. Supplemental external beam radiotherapy was not used. The prognostic features, dose metrics, and follow-up data were prospectively collected. Kaplan-Meier and Cox regression analyses were used to assess the factors associated with freedom from biochemical recurrence and survival.ResultsThe median patient age at treatment was 66 years. The median follow-up was 54 months for biochemical outcomes and 66 months for survival. The actuarial freedom from biochemical recurrence rate was 95.6% +/- 1.6% at 5 years and 94.0% +/- 2.2% at 7 years. On multivariate analysis, the pretreatment prostate-specific antigen level (P = .03) and androgen deprivation therapy use (P = .04) were predictive of the freedom from biochemical recurrence. The actuarial rates of distant metastasis and disease-specific death at 5 years were both <1%. The overall survival rate at 5 years was 95.2% +/- 1.4% and was 93.4% +/- 1.8% at 7 years. On multivariate analysis, only age was predictive of overall survival (P = .011).ConclusionsWhen consistently planned and delivered, low-dose-rate brachytherapy, without supplemental external beam radiotherapy or intraoperative planning, can produce cancer-specific outcomes for men with low- and "low-tier" intermediate-risk prostate cancer at least equal to that produced by dose-escalated external beam radiotherapy or surgical prostatectomy.

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