Intensity-modulated radiotherapy versus stereotactic body radiotherapy for prostate cancer (PACE-B): 2-year toxicity results from an open-label, randomised, phase 3, non-inferiority trial

Alison Tree(Institute of Cancer Research), Peter Ostler(Mount Vernon Cancer Centre), H. van der Voet(James Cook University Hospital), William Chu(Sunnybrook Health Science Centre), Andrew Loblaw(Sunnybrook Health Science Centre), Daniel Ford(NIHR Surgical Reconstruction and Microbiology Research Centre), Shaun Tolan(Clatterbridge Cancer Centre NHS Foundation Trust), Suneil Jain(Queen's University Belfast), Alexander S. Martin(Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), John Staffurth(Cardiff University), John Armstrong(Cancer Trials Ireland), Philip Camilleri(Churchill Hospital), Kiran Kancherla(University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust), J. Frew(Freeman Hospital), Andrew Chan(University Hospital Coventry), Ian S. Dayes(McMaster University), Aileen Duffton(Beatson West of Scotland Cancer Centre), Douglas Brand(Institute of Cancer Research), Daniel Henderson(NIHR Surgical Reconstruction and Microbiology Research Centre), Kirsty Morrison(Institute of Cancer Research), Stephanie Brown(Institute of Cancer Research), Julia Pugh(Institute of Cancer Research), Stephanie Burnett(Institute of Cancer Research), Muneeb Mahmud(Institute of Cancer Research), Victoria Hinder(Institute of Cancer Research), Olivia Naismith(Royal Marsden Hospital), Emma Hall(Institute of Cancer Research), Nicholas van As(Institute of Cancer Research), Éric Lartigau, Suzanne E. Patton(Queen's University Belfast), Alan Thompson, Mathias Winkler(Institute of Cancer Research), Paula Wells, Timothy Lymberiou, Deanna Saunders(Institute of Cancer Research), Maria Vilarino-Varela(Institute of Cancer Research), Peter Vavassis, Theodoros Tsakiridis, R Carlson(Institute of Cancer Research), George Rodrigues, Jean-François Tanguay(Institute of Cancer Research), Shahid Iqbal(Queen's University Belfast), Mathias Winkler(Institute of Cancer Research), Scott C. Morgan(Queen's University Belfast), Alina Mihai, A Li, Omar Din, M. Panadés(Institute of Cancer Research), Ros Wade(Institute of Cancer Research), Y. Rimmer(Institute of Cancer Research), M. Panadés(Institute of Cancer Research), Nikhil Babu Oommen(Institute of Cancer Research)
The Lancet Oncology
September 13, 2022
Cited by 301Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Localised prostate cancer is commonly treated with external beam radiotherapy and moderate hypofractionation is non-inferior to longer schedules. Stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) allows shorter treatment courses without impacting acute toxicity. We report 2-year toxicity findings from PACE-B, a randomised trial of conventionally fractionated or moderately hypofractionated radiotherapy versus SBRT. METHODS: PACE is an open-label, multicohort, randomised, controlled, phase 3 trial conducted at 35 hospitals in the UK, Ireland, and Canada. In PACE-B, men aged 18 years and older with a WHO performance status 0-2 and low-risk or intermediate-risk histologically-confirmed prostate adenocarcinoma (Gleason 4 + 3 excluded) were randomly allocated (1:1) by computerised central randomisation with permuted blocks (size four and six), stratified by centre and risk group to control radiotherapy (CRT; 78 Gy in 39 fractions over 7·8 weeks or, following protocol amendment on March 24, 2016, 62 Gy in 20 fractions over 4 weeks) or SBRT (36·25 Gy in five fractions over 1-2 weeks). Androgen deprivation was not permitted. Co-primary outcomes for this toxicity analysis were Radiation Therapy Oncology Group (RTOG) grade 2 or worse gastrointestinal and genitourinary toxicity at 24 months after radiotherapy. Analysis was by treatment received and included all patients with at least one fraction of study treatment assessed for late toxicity. Recruitment is complete. Follow-up for oncological outcomes continues. The trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT01584258. FINDINGS: We enrolled and randomly assigned 874 men between Aug 7, 2012, and Jan 4, 2018 (441 to CRT and 433 to SBRT). In this analysis, 430 patients were analysed in the CRT group and 414 in the SBRT group; a total of 844 (97%) of 874 randomly assigned patients. At 24 months, RTOG grade 2 or worse genitourinary toxicity was seen in eight (2%) of 381 participants assigned to CRT and 13 (3%) of 384 participants assigned to SBRT (absolute difference 1·3% [95% CI -1·3 to 4·0]; p=0·39); RTOG grade 2 or worse gastrointestinal toxicity was seen in 11 (3%) of 382 participants in the CRT group versus six (2%) of 384 participants in the SBRT group (absolute difference -1·3% [95% CI -3·9 to 1·1]; p=0·32). No serious adverse events (defined as RTOG grade 4 or worse) or treatment-related deaths were reported within the analysis timeframe. INTERPRETATION: In the PACE-B trial, 2-year RTOG toxicity rates were similar for five fraction SBRT and conventional schedules of radiotherapy. Prostate SBRT was found to be safe and associated with low rates of side-effects. Biochemical outcomes are awaited. FUNDING: Accuray.


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