Post-radiotherapy prostate biopsies reveal heightened apex positivity relative to other prostate regions sampled RADIOTHERAPY AND ONCOLOGY Huang, K. T., Stoyanova, R., Walker, G., Sandler, K., Studenski, M. T., Dogan, N., Al-Saleem, T., Buyyounouski, M. K., Horwitz, E. M., Pollack, A. 2015; 115 (1): 101-106

Abstract

Prostate biopsy positivity after radiotherapy (RT) is a significant determinant of eventual biochemical failure. We mapped pre- and post-treatment tumor locations to determine if residual disease is location-dependent.There were 303 patients treated on a randomized hypofractionation trial. Of these, 125 underwent prostate biopsy 2-years post-RT. Biopsy cores were mapped to a sextant template, and 86 patients with both pre-/post-treatment systematic sextant biopsies were analyzed.The pretreatment distribution of positive biopsy cores was not significantly related to prostate region (base, mid, apex; p=0.723). Whereas all regions post-RT had reduced positive biopsies, the base was reduced to the greatest degree and the apex the least (p=0.045). In 38 patients who had a positive post-treatment biopsy, there was change in the rate of apical positivity before and after treatment (76 vs. 71%; p=0.774), while significant reductions were seen in the mid and base.In our experience, persistence of prostate tumor cells after RT increases going from the base to apex. MRI was used in planning and image guidance was performed daily during treatment, so geographic miss of the apex is unlikely. Nonetheless, the pattern observed suggests that attention to apex dosimetry is a priority.

View details for DOI 10.1016/j.radonc.2015.03.006

View details for Web of Science ID 000356736300019

View details for PubMedID 25963053