Noah Margolese, Johanna Dahan, Damien A R Olivié, Jean-Sébastien Billiard, Guila Delouya, Daniel Taussky
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objectives: We conducted an analysis of the prognostic implications of MRI findings prior to radiotherapy in patients diagnosed with prostate cancer.
Methods: Patients from our institutional database who were treated with radiotherapy between 2014-2024 were searched for diagnostic MRI. The prognostic significance of PI-RADS score, index-lesion diameter, and Cancer of the Prostate Risk Assessment (CAPRA) score on biochemical recurrence was analysed.
Results: Of the 1480 patients, 499 (33.7%) underwent a diagnostic pre-treatment MRI; 49.5% were treated with low-dose brachytherapy, 29.8% with external beam radiation therapy (EBRT) plus a high-dose rate brachytherapy boost, and 20.7% with EBRT alone. Among the patients who underwent MRI, 404 (81%) had PI-RADS 4-5, including 35% with lesions ≥15 mm and 20% with lesions ≥20 mm. The median follow-up period was 44 months (IQR:23-66). Among the 78 patients who subsequently experienced biochemical recurrence, 16 underwent a diagnostic MRI prior to treatment. CAPRA score did not correlate with lesion diameter (P = 0.4). In univariate analysis, lesions ≥15 mm (P = 0.026) and ≥20 mm (P < 0.001) were significant predictors, as was CAPRA score (P < 0.001). In multivariate analyses, lesion size ≥20 mm (hazard ratio [HR], 3.49; 95%CI:1.25-9.76, P = 0.017) but not ≥15 mm significantly predicted recurrence. Stratified by CAPRA, only in high-risk cancers (score 6-10, 21% of patients) was a lesion ≥20 mm a significant predictor (P < 0.001).
Conclusions: We determined that a lesion on MRI with a diameter of ≥20 mm was an independent prognostic factor for biochemical recurrence, particularly in high-risk cancers. Whether the radiation dose-escalation of these lesions can improve clinical outcomes must be determined.
Advances in knowledge: We found that a prostate lesion on MRI with a diameter ≥20 mm was associated with poorer outcomes following radiotherapy.
期刊介绍:
BJR is the international research journal of the British Institute of Radiology and is the oldest scientific journal in the field of radiology and related sciences.
Dating back to 1896, BJR’s history is radiology’s history, and the journal has featured some landmark papers such as the first description of Computed Tomography "Computerized transverse axial tomography" by Godfrey Hounsfield in 1973. A valuable historical resource, the complete BJR archive has been digitized from 1896.
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