Long-Term Implications of a Positive Posttreatment Biopsy in Patients Treated with External Beam Radiotherapy for Clinically Localized Prostate Cancer

Michael J Zelefsky, Debra A Goldman, Victor Reuter, Marisa Kollmeier, Sean McBride, Zhigang Zhang, Melissa Varghese, Xin Pei, Zvi Fuks, Michael J Zelefsky, Debra A Goldman, Victor Reuter, Marisa Kollmeier, Sean McBride, Zhigang Zhang, Melissa Varghese, Xin Pei, Zvi Fuks

Abstract

Purpose: We determined the prognostic importance of a positive posttreatment biopsy after prostate radiotherapy.

Materials and methods: A total of 382 patients underwent a posttreatment biopsy after external beam radiotherapy for clinically localized prostate cancer. Posttreatment biopsies were classified as positive (prostatic adenocarcinoma without typical radiation induced changes), negative (no evidence of carcinoma) or adenocarcinoma with a severe treatment effect. Median followup in survivors was 9 years. Competing risks regression was used to assess relationships between prognostic predictors and cause specific mortality, distant metastasis and prostate specific antigen failure.

Results: The prevalence of positive biopsy, treatment effect and negative biopsy was 30%, 22% and 48%, respectively. Androgen deprivation therapy omission and high risk disease were associated with a 2.6 and 1.8-fold increase, respectively, in the odds of positive posttreatment biopsy. The 15-year PSA relapse rate associated with negative, severe treatment effect and positive posttreatment biopsies was 34%, 36% and 79%, respectively (p <0.001). After controlling for known predictors the risk of distant metastasis was 2.6-fold higher in patients with a positive biopsy (p <0.001) and cause specific mortality was twice as high in patients with a positive biopsy compared to those with negative and severe treatment effect biopsy outcomes (HR 2.00, p = 0.022).

Conclusions: A positive posttreatment biopsy after external beam radiotherapy was associated with a higher risk of distant metastasis and prostate cancer related death. Patients with severe treatment effect classified biopsies have biological characteristics more like patients with a negative biopsy than a positive biopsy. Posttreatment biopsies were more often positive in the setting of external beam radiotherapy alone without androgen deprivation therapy or in the presence of high risk disease.

Keywords: biopsy; mortality; neoplasm metastasis; prostatic neoplasms; radiotherapy.

Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
CSM, DM and PSA Failure Cumulative Incidence Plots by Biopsy Result (Positive, Negative, and STE) Legend: This plot displays the cumulative incidence of (a) cause specific mortality, (b) distant metastases, (c) PSA failure after biopsy stratified by biopsy findings. In this figure, STE and negative are represented by separate curves. These figures illustrate that patients with STE have similar incidence of outcomes compared to patients with negative biopsy.
Figure 2.
Figure 2.
CSM, DM and PSA Failure Cumulative Incidence Plots by Biopsy Result (Positive and Negative) Legend: Figure displays the cumulative incidence for the three primary outcomes: (a) cause specific mortality, (b) distant metastases, and (c) PSA failure after biopsy result. Negative biopsies include those with severe treatment effects.

Source: PubMed

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