I. Thiam, K. Ka, A. Badiane, M. Bâ, El Hadj Amadou Sall, B. Ndong, Papa Ameth Fall, M. Dieng, P. Gaye
{"title":"Curative 3D Conformal Radiotherapy of Non-Operated Prostate Adenocarcinoma at Pointe-a-Pitre University Hospital (Guadeloupe): About 29 Cases","authors":"I. Thiam, K. Ka, A. Badiane, M. Bâ, El Hadj Amadou Sall, B. Ndong, Papa Ameth Fall, M. Dieng, P. Gaye","doi":"10.4236/JCT.2021.125026","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Context: Technological advances have improved the toxicities of radiotherapy. We \nare evaluating the 3D technique in prostate cancer. Materials and Methods: Retrospective study from January 2015 to December 2015 with 29 files. Survival \nwas calculated by Kaplan-Meier method. Results: We collected 29 patient \nrecords over the study period. The median age was 75 years with the following \nextremes: 54 years and 83 years. The median PSA level was 12 ng/ml with a range \nof 3.05 to 79 ng/ml. Gleason score analysis showed 6 patients (20.69%) with a \nscore of 6 (3 + 3), 23 patients (79.31%) with a score of 7 including 12 \npatients (41.38%) with grade 3 and 11 patients (37.93%) with grade 4. The \nmedian dose delivered was 74 Gy, with a mean dose of 73.79 Gy and extremes of \n70 Gy for the minimum and 76 Gy for the maximum. Hormone therapy was combined \nwith radiotherapy in 17 patients (58.62%). Seven \npatients (24.14%) had grade 1 acute bladder toxicity and one patient (3.45%) had grade 2 acute toxicity. Late \nbladder toxicity was grade 1 in 5 patients (17.24%), grade 2 in 3 \npatients (10.34%) and grade 3 in 1 patient (3.45%). Late rectal toxicity, grade 2 in 3 patients (10.34%), grade 3 in 1 \npatient, was noted. Overall survival at 2 years was 100% and 89.65% at 5 years. \nRelapse-free survival at 2 years was \n82.76% and 62.07% at 5 years. There were 3 deaths (10.34%) of which only one \nwas related to prostate cancer. Conclusion: Radiotherapy, like surgery, is a fundamental option \nfor the treatment of prostate cancers, particularly those that are \nlocally advanced. It is gaining in importance with the improvement of \ntechniques (IMRT, VMAT…) and new fractionations which contribute to the \nreduction of toxicities and the comfort of patients (shorter spread).","PeriodicalId":66197,"journal":{"name":"癌症治疗(英文)","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-05-12","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"癌症治疗(英文)","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.4236/JCT.2021.125026","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Context: Technological advances have improved the toxicities of radiotherapy. We
are evaluating the 3D technique in prostate cancer. Materials and Methods: Retrospective study from January 2015 to December 2015 with 29 files. Survival
was calculated by Kaplan-Meier method. Results: We collected 29 patient
records over the study period. The median age was 75 years with the following
extremes: 54 years and 83 years. The median PSA level was 12 ng/ml with a range
of 3.05 to 79 ng/ml. Gleason score analysis showed 6 patients (20.69%) with a
score of 6 (3 + 3), 23 patients (79.31%) with a score of 7 including 12
patients (41.38%) with grade 3 and 11 patients (37.93%) with grade 4. The
median dose delivered was 74 Gy, with a mean dose of 73.79 Gy and extremes of
70 Gy for the minimum and 76 Gy for the maximum. Hormone therapy was combined
with radiotherapy in 17 patients (58.62%). Seven
patients (24.14%) had grade 1 acute bladder toxicity and one patient (3.45%) had grade 2 acute toxicity. Late
bladder toxicity was grade 1 in 5 patients (17.24%), grade 2 in 3
patients (10.34%) and grade 3 in 1 patient (3.45%). Late rectal toxicity, grade 2 in 3 patients (10.34%), grade 3 in 1
patient, was noted. Overall survival at 2 years was 100% and 89.65% at 5 years.
Relapse-free survival at 2 years was
82.76% and 62.07% at 5 years. There were 3 deaths (10.34%) of which only one
was related to prostate cancer. Conclusion: Radiotherapy, like surgery, is a fundamental option
for the treatment of prostate cancers, particularly those that are
locally advanced. It is gaining in importance with the improvement of
techniques (IMRT, VMAT…) and new fractionations which contribute to the
reduction of toxicities and the comfort of patients (shorter spread).