Radiation Treatments Show Similar Results in Prostate Cancer Patients After Surgery, AHRQ Study Finds
New
research from AHRQ’s Effective Health Care Program finds that for
prostate cancer patients who require radiotherapy following
prostatectomy, the prostate cancer therapies intensity-modulated
radiotherapy (IMRT) and conformal radiotherapy (CRT) achieved similar
morbidity and cancer control results. Men who received IMRT versus CRT
showed no significant difference in rates of long-term gastrointestinal
morbidity, urinary nonincontinent morbidity, urinary incontinence, or
erectile dysfunction. There was also no significant difference in
subsequent treatment for recurrent disease. IMRT is a newer and more
costly treatment option for postprostatectomy patients with adverse
pathology results or recurrent disease. It remains unclear whether the
potential benefits of a more focused radiation technique will be
realized in terms of improving outcomes of men with localized prostate
cancer. The report, titled Comparative Effectiveness of
Intensity-Modulated Radiotherapy and Conventional Conformal Radiotherapy
in the Treatment of Prostate Cancer After Radical Prostatectomy, appeared online May 20 in JAMA Internal Medicine. Select to access the abstract on PubMed.®
JAMA Intern Med. 2013 May 20:1-8. doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2013.1020. [Epub ahead of print]
Comparative Effectiveness of Intensity-Modulated Radiotherapy and Conventional Conformal Radiotherapy in the Treatment of Prostate Cancer After Radical Prostatectomy.
Abstract
IMPORTANCE
Comparative effectiveness research of prostate cancer therapies is
needed because of the development and rapid clinical adoption of newer
and costlier treatments without proven clinical benefit. Radiotherapy is
indicated after prostatectomy in select patients who have adverse
pathologic features and in those with recurrent disease. OBJECTIVES To
examine the patterns of use of intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT), a
newer, more expensive technology that may reduce radiation dose to
adjacent organs compared with the older conformal radiotherapy (CRT) in
the postprostatectomy setting, and to compare disease control and
morbidity outcomes of these treatments. DESIGN AND SETTING Data from the
Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results-Medicare-linked database
were used to identify patients with a diagnosis of prostate cancer who
had received radiotherapy within 3 years after prostatectomy.
PARTICIPANTS Patients who received IMRT or CRT. MAIN OUTCOMES AND
MEASURES The outcomes of 457 IMRT and 557 CRT patients who received
radiotherapy between 2002 and 2007 were compared using their claims
through 2009. We used propensity score methods to balance baseline
characteristics and estimate adjusted incidence rate ratios (RRs) and
their 95% CIs for measured outcomes. RESULTS Use of IMRT increased from
zero in 2000 to 82.1% in 2009. Men who received IMRT vs CRT showed no
significant difference in rates of long-term gastrointestinal morbidity
(RR, 0.95; 95% CI, 0.66-1.37), urinary nonincontinent morbidity (0.93;
0.66-1.33), urinary incontinence (0.98; 0.71-1.35), or erectile
dysfunction (0.85; 0.61-1.19). There was no significant difference in
subsequent treatment for recurrent disease (RR, 1.31; 95% CI,
0.90-1.92). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE Postprostatectomy IMRT and CRT
achieved similar morbidity and cancer control outcomes. The potential
clinical benefit of IMRT in this setting is unclear. Given that IMRT is
more expensive, its use for postprostatectomy radiotherapy may not be
cost-effective compared with CRT, although formal analysis is needed.
- PMID:
- 23689844
- [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
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