Cancers (Jan 2024)

Salvage Radiotherapy for Relapsed Prostate Cancer after Radical Prostatectomy Is Associated with Normal Life Expectancy

  • Gunnar Lohm,
  • Franz Knörnschild,
  • Konrad Neumann,
  • Volker Budach,
  • Stefan Schwartz,
  • Susen Burock,
  • Dirk Böhmer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16030534
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 3
p. 534

Abstract

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In patients with prostate cancer (PCa), salvage radiotherapy (SRT) for biochemical progression (BP) after radical prostatectomy (RP) improves PCa-specific survival. However, no prospective randomized trials have compared the effect of SRT with untreated patients. In this analysis of 151 patients who received SRT for post-RP BP, we compared their overall survival (OS) with virtual, age-matched controls (n = 151,000) retrieved from government life tables. We also investigated the risk factors associated with BP and OS and compared the prostate-specific antigen (PSA) doubling times (DTs) before and after SRT for patients with BP. The median follow-up was 9.3 years for BP and 17.4 years for OS. The risk factors significantly affecting BP were Gleason score (p p = 0.003), and negative surgical margins (p = 0.003). None of these risk factors were associated with OS. In 93 patients with BP after SRT, the median PSADT was significantly prolonged compared with pre-SRT values (3.7 vs. 8.3 months, p p = 0.112), and life expectancy was similar, likely due to the survival benefit of SRT. The prolonged PSADT after SRT further supports the beneficial role of SRT in this patient population. However, subsequent treatments were not systematically recorded, which may have affected the results.

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