Targeted cryoablation of the prostate:
7-year outcomes in the primary treatment of prostate cancer.
Bahn DK, Lee F, Badalament R, Kumar A,
Greski J, Chernick M.
Prostate Institute of America, Community Memorial
Hospital, Ventura, California 93003, USA. dkbahn@cmhhospital.org
The efficacy and safety of the long-term experience
with targeted cryoablation of prostate cancer (TCAP) at a community
hospital is retrospectively reviewed. A series of 590 consecutive
patients who underwent TCAP as primary therapy with curative intent
for localized or locally advanced prostate cancer from March 1993
to September 2001 were identified. Patients were stratified into
3 risk groups according to clinical characteristics. Biochemical
disease-free survival (bDFS), post-TCAP biopsy results, and post-TCAP
morbidity were calculated and presented. The mean follow-up time
for all patients was 5.43 years. The percentages of patients in
the low-, medium-, and high-risk groups were 15.9%, 30.3%, and 53.7%,
respectively. Using a prostate-specific antigen (PSA)-based definition
of biochemical failure of 0.5 ng/mL, results were as follows: (1)
the 7-year actuarial bDFS for low-, medium-, and high-risk patients
were 61%, 68%, and 61%, respectively; (2) the bDFS probabilities
for a PSA cutoff of 1.0 ng/mL for low-, medium-, and high-risk patients
were 87%, 79%, and 71%, respectively; and (3) the bDFS probabilities
for low-, medium-, and high-risk patients using the American Society
for Therapeutic Radiology and Oncology (ASTRO) definition of biochemical
failure (3 successive increases of PSA level) were 92%, 89%, and
89%, respectively. The rate of positive biopsy was 13%. After a
positive biopsy, 32 patients underwent repeat cryoablation. For
those patients who underwent repeat cryoablation, 68%, 72%, and
91% remain bDFS using definitions of 0.5 ng/mL, 1.0 ng/mL, and the
ASTRO criteria, respectively, after a mean follow-up time since
repeat cryoablation of 63 months. The rates of morbidity were modest,
and no serious complications were observed. TCAP was shown to equal
or surpass the outcome data of external-beam radiation, 3-dimensional
conformal radiation, and brachytherapy. These 7-year outcome data
provide compelling validation of TCAP as an efficacious treatment
modality for locally confined and locally advanced prostatic carcinoma.
PMID: 12206842 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
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