Abstract
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVES: Rectal spacers have been shown to reduce rectal side effects in patients receiving prostate radiation. However, concerns remain regarding precise and reproducible gel injection. We evaluated efficacy and safety of a novel rectoprostatic spacer balloon which allows potential for controlled, adaptable deployment. This study tested co-primary hypotheses: 1) Balloon spacer would result in = 25% reduction of rectal V70 in > 75% of subjects, and 2) Implantation procedure-related and rectal = Grade 1 adverse events within 6 months (duration = 2 days, CTCAE 4.0) would be non-inferior in balloon vs control subjects. MATERIALS/METHODS: 222 subjects were enrolled at 16 centers. All patients had T1-T3 prostate cancer without MRI evidence of posterior extraprostatic invasion. Randomization was 2:1 (balloon: control) and subject-blinded. Patients underwent transperineal TRUS-guided fiducial placement +/- balloon, followed by IMRT (81 Gy in 1.8 Gy fractions or biologically equivalent hypofractionated dose). For efficacy comparisons, plans were generated by a central core lab on pre- and post-implant CT scans. RESULTS: The primary efficacy endpoint was met, with 97.9% of balloon subjects (139/142) having rectal V70 reduction >25% (p<0.001). Mean V70 was 7.0 % pre- vs 1.1% post- implant. The primary safety endpoint was met with balloon subjects experiencing fewer = Grade 1 events, 18% vs 23% (p < 0.001 for non-inferiority). On pre-defined secondary endpoint of = Grade 2 events, rates trended lower in balloon subjects (4.3% vs 6.5%, p=0.527). Mean perirectal spacing was 19 ±3.7mm and maintained through radiation treatment (18 ±3.9mm). Balloon resorption was observed on 6-month CT in 98.5% (133/135) of subjects. The EPIC QOL instrument was collected throughout study, and did not differ statistically between the study arms. CONCLUSIONS: Biodegradable rectal spacer balloon was effective in significantly reducing dose to rectum, and associated with decreased cumulative rectal plus implantation-related adverse events. Balloon resorption was consistently observed by 6 months.
Original language | English |
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Journal | International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics |
DOIs | |
Publication status | E-pub ahead of print - 18 Jul 2024 |
Keywords
- Balloon Spacer
- Organ at Risk
- Perirectal spacer
- prostate cancer
- radiation therapy