Sedra Mohammadi, Isabella R Pompa, Veronica Haberman, Bashar Kako, Richard J Lee, Philip J Saylor, Xin Gao, Shadi A Esfahani, Pedram Heidari, Praful Ravi, Mutlay Sayan, Jason A Efstathiou, Heather A Jacene, Sophia C Kamran, Thomas S C Ng
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Purpose: 177Lu-PSMA-617 (LuPSMA) is an effective radiopharmaceutical therapy for patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer. While LuPSMA can treat disseminated disease, additional localized control of metastatic disease may be required. Metastasis-targeted external beam radiation therapy (M-EBRT) can be an effective adjunct. However, the indications, efficacy, and safety/toxicity of combining M-EBRT with LuPSMA are unclear. Here, we report our experience with M-EBRT in patients receiving LuPSMA and assess M-EBRT's ability for local disease control and palliation.
Methods and materials: This retrospective institutional review board-exempted study reviewed patients treated with LuPSMA at a multi-institutional academic cancer center within the first 2 years after United States Food and Drug Administration's approval, receiving contemporaneous M-EBRT. Clinical factors driving the use of M-EBRT were analyzed.
Results: Treatment courses of 261 patients receiving LuPSMA were reviewed; 52 patients received M-EBRT contemporaneously. M-EBRT was administered for intracranial/epidural disease (n = 22/52; 42%), bone pain palliation (n = 17/52; 33%), prevention of pathological fractures (n = 12/52; 23%), and 12% (n = 6/52) for various other indications. M-EBRT timing varied among patients, with 54% (n = 28/52) receiving M-EBRT before, 27% (n = 14/52) after, and 13% (n = 7/52) during LuPSMA therapy. EBRT was mostly well tolerated, although lymphopenia was commonly experienced. Most patients (n = 32/52; 62%) had symptom relief following M-EBRT. Symptom relief post-M-EBRT was 68%, 85%, and 50%, and mortality rates were 32%, 29%, and 57% for patients receiving EBRT before, during, and after LuPSMA treatment, respectively, albeit not statistically significant (P > .23). Prostate-specific antigen (PSA)50 (decrease in PSA by 50% during treatment) response in this patient population was 41% compared with 50% in the general LuPSMA population, but the magnitude of PSA response was heterogeneous (P = .27).
Conclusions: In our experience, M-EBRT was used effectively with LuPSMA therapy for local tumor control and symptom management, especially for localized osseous and central nervous system lesions, and with good tolerability. M-EBRT may be an important adjunct treatment modality that facilitates the initiation and/or continuation of LuPSMA.
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.