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ECCLU 2011 - M. Bolla - Prostate cancer: Locally advanced disease and patient advocacy - Adjuvant versus salvage radiation
1. Prostate cancer Adjuvant versus salvage radiation Bolla Michel Educational Cancer Convention Lugano May 13 2011
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4. Biochemical PFS in the wait-and see arm by margin status (review vs local pathologist) (years) 0 2 4 6 8 10 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 O N Number of patients at risk : Margin status 22 76 65 34 12 6 22 33 21 10 4 2 11 40 30 19 13 5 57 119 86 48 23 6 Loc - / Rev - Loc - / Rev + Loc + / Rev - Loc + / Rev + Local - / Review - Local - / Review + Local + / Review - Local + / Review + Van der Kwast TH et al. Virchows Archiv 2006; 449: 428-434.
5. Van der Kwast, T. H. et al. J Clin Oncol; 25:4178-4186 2007 Biochemical progression-free survival according to margin status and localization for patients in the control arm EORTC Trial 22911
6. Consensus 1 Tumour extending close to the capsular margin, but not into it, should be reported as NEGATIVE Consensus 2 Location(s) of positive margins should be reported as posterior, posterolateral, lateral, anterior at either apex, mid or base. Consensus 3 The extent of a positive margin should be reported as mm of involvement. The ISUP Consensus Conference on Handling and Staging of the Radical Prostatectomy Specimen.
7. Guidelines and recommendations for radical prostatectomy and definitive radiation therapy Heindenreich A. et al Eur Urol . 2011, 59 , 61-71
10. Results of salvage therapy Edouard J. Trabulsi, Richard K. Valicenti, Alexandra L. Hanlon, Thomas M. Pisansky, Howard M. Sandler, Deborah A. Kuban, Charles N. Catton, Jeff M. Michalski, Michael J. Zelefsky, Patrick A. Kupelian, Daniel W. Lin, Mitchell S. Anscher, Kevin M. Slawin, Claus G. Roehrborn, Jeffrey D. Forman, Stanley L. Liauw, Larry L. Kestin, Theodore L. DeWeese, Peter T. Scardino, Andrew J. Stephenson, and Alan Pollack UROLOGY 2008;72:1998-1302 A multi-institutional and salvage postoperative radiation therapy for pT3-4 N0 prostate cancer
18. EORTC trial 22911 DESIGN Wait and see (W&S) until local failure Post-op radiotherapy (RTX: 60 Gy/6wks) 1005 patients with pT2-T3N0 prostate cancer operated and randomized were entered from 1992 to 2001 First study results with 5 years median follow-up (Bolla et al. Lancet 2005) showed significant difference in clinical and biochemical progression-free survival The median follow-up is now 10.6 years Randomization Extraprostatic invasion and/or S eminal vesicle invasion and/or Positive surgical margins S U R G E R Y Who PS 0-1 Age 75 y T0-3N0M0 PCa
19. Pathological Risk factors Combination of risk factors Wait-and-See (N=503) Irradiation (N=502) Total (N=1005) N (%) N (%) N (%) No risk factor (ineligible) 0 (0.0) 2 (0.4) 2 (0.2) ECE+ only 127 (25.2) 139 (27.7) 266 (26.5) SV+ only 19 (3.8) 23 (4.6) 42 (4.2) SM+ only 79 (15.7) 84 (16.7) 163 (16.2) ECE+ ,SV+, SM- 40 (8.0) 26 (5.2) 66 (6.6) ECE+, SV-, SM+ 169 (33.6) 149 (29.7) 318 (31.6) ECE-, SV+, SM+ 8 (1.6) 16 (3.2) 24 (2.4) ECE+, SV+, SM+ 61 (12.1) 63 (12.5) 124 (12.3)
30. Metastis-free survival for radiotherapy arm stratified by PSA after prostatectomy p = 0.03 Thompson I.M et al – J. Urol 2009;181:956-962
31. SWOG Trial Overall survival Thompson I.M et al – J. Urol 2009;181:956-962 p = 0.023
32. EORTC 22043-30041 M.Bolla, H.van Poppel Post-operative 3DCRT/IMRT 64 Gy/32 fr/6.5wks cT1-2 or cT3a, N0M0 PSA 20 ng/ml WHO 0-1 Age 80 y pT2R1N0M0 Gleason 5-10 Undetectable PSA R SAME + 6 months HT (1mo AA starting 15d prior d1 of RT, one 6mo depot injection of LH-RH on d1 of RT) pT3a-bR1N0M0 Gleason 5-10 Undetectable PSA Radical Px with LN dissection or LN sampling 3 months from RPx to R 4 months from RPx to d1 of RT (but patient must be fully continent when initiating RT) pT3a-bR0N0M0 Gleason 5-10 Undetectable PSA
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34. MRC « Radicals » R adiotherapy and A ndrogen D eprivation I n C ombination A fter L ocal S urgery
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Notas do Editor
The combination of AD and RT represents a long story, written thanks to a lot of phase III trials and this story is still going on.
Before saying that radiotherapy might be mandatory in case of positive margins, we must keep in mind that there are several causes of variation as regard the status of surgical margins
This variation of assessment is clearly shown by the comparison of results between local and review pathologist and is depending on the number of cases managed per year by the centre as shown on this slide: the higher the number of cases, the higher the agreement with the review pathologist
looking at the biochemical PFS in the wait and see arm of the EORTC trial, the review pathology assessment is a much stronger predictor of outcome than the local review.
the anatomical site of the margin as well as the number of positive margins have a negative impact on the biochemical PFS in the wait and see arm of the EORTC trial.
consensus guidelines have been established by the International Society of Urological Pathology to reduce the disagreement Therefore the status of margins on the pathological report is of paramount importance In conclusion, consensus guidelines have been established to reduce the disagreement between pathologists,such as
according to the EUA guidelines
a better knowledge between surgeons and radiation oncologist culture, must help us better understand the field of our cooperation, adjuvant radiotherapy coming not to sign the end of the surgical act, but as a mean to destroy the infra clinical disease potentially left by the surgeon, has indicated by the pathological prognostic factors, with far less time than the one spent between the first human step on the earth and the firts one on the moon.
To enter into the debate allow me first to look at retrospective analysis and I will focus your attention on pT3 pN0 patients
The benefit is strongest for patients with Gleason score <8
As you can see, patients with salvage RT, whatever the combination with HT are going better, and patients with no salvage RT are going worse.
It is difficult to talk only about positive surgical margins, since in the EORTC trial +SM occur in less 16% so I will talk about patients classified pT3 whatever the surgical margin status is .
Here please mention that there was likely some underreporting of events, but most likely of low grade events and similarly in both arms, thus even if absolute rates might be somewhat under repported, the difference between groups is unliklly biased