Multicentric oncologic outcomes of high-intensity focused ultrasound for localized prostate cancer in 803 patients.

Journal: European Urology
Published:
Abstract

Background: High-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) is an emerging treatment for select patients with localized prostate cancer (PCa).

Objective: To report the oncologic outcome of HIFU as a primary care option for localized prostate cancer from a multicenter database.

Methods: Patients with localized PCa treated with curative intent and presenting at least a 2-yr follow-up from February 1993 were considered in this study. Previously irradiated patients were excluded from this analysis. In case of any residual or recurrent PCa, patients were systematically offered a second session. Kaplan-Meier analysis was performed to determine disease-free survival rates (DFSR). Methods: Prostate-specific antigen (PSA), clinical stage, and pathologic results were measured pre- and post-HIFU.

Conclusions: A total of 803 patients from six urologic departments met the inclusion criteria. Stratification according to d'Amico's risk group was low, intermediate, and high in 40.2%, 46.3%, and 13.5% of patients, respectively. Mean follow-up was 42+/-33 mo. Mean PSA nadir was 1.0+/-2.8 ng/ml with 54.3% reaching a nadir of < or =0.3 ng/ml. Control biopsies were negative in 85% of cases. The overall and cancer-specific survival rates at 8 yr were 89% and 99%, respectively. The metastasis-free survival rate at 8 yr was 97%. Initial PSA value and Gleason score value significantly influence the DFSR. The 5- and 7-yr biochemical-free survival rates (Phoenix criteria) were 83-75%, 72-63%, and 68-62% (p=0.03) and the additional treatment-free survival rates were 84-79%, 68-61%, and 52-54% (p<0.001) for low-, intermediate-, and high-risk patients, respectively. PSA nadir was a major predictive factor for HIFU success: negative biopsies, stable PSA, and no additional therapy. Conclusions: Local control and DFSR achieved with HIFU were similar to those expected with conformal external-beam radiation therapy (EBRT). The excellent cancer-specific survival rate is also explained by the possibility to repeat HIFU and use salvage EBRT.

Authors
Sebastien Crouzet, Xavier Rebillard, Daniel Chevallier, Pascal Rischmann, Gilles Pasticier, Gregory Garcia, Olivier Rouviere, Jean-yves Chapelon, Albert Gelet
Relevant Conditions

Prostate Cancer, Prostatectomy