放射線治療後に再発した前立腺がんに対するフォーカル療法が副作用を抑えて有効と判明(Focal therapy effectively treats men whose prostate cancer returns after radiotherapy with fewer side effects, says new study)

ad

2026-02-15 インペリアル・カレッジ・ロンドン(ICL)

インペリアル・カレッジ・ロンドンの研究チームは、放射線治療後に再発した前立腺がん患者に対するフォーカル療法(腫瘍部位のみを標的とする局所治療)が、有効かつ副作用を抑えられる可能性を示した。臨床データ解析の結果、がん制御率は良好で、尿失禁や性機能障害などの重篤な副作用は従来の全摘術より低頻度だった。再照射や全摘に代わる低侵襲な選択肢として期待され、生活の質(QOL)を維持しながら再発がんを管理できる可能性が示唆された。

<関連情報>

局所放射線再発性前立腺癌に対する救済局所療法と根治的前立腺摘除術の比較 Salvage Focal Therapy vs Radical Prostatectomy for Localized Radiorecurrent Prostate Cancer

Alexander Light, MBBS; Max Peters, PhD; Manit Arya, MD;et al
JAMA Oncology  Published:February 12, 2026
DOI:10.1001/jamaoncol.2025.6448

Key Points

Question How do cancer control and perioperative complications compare after salvage focal therapy vs salvage radical prostatectomy for localized radiorecurrent prostate cancer?

Findings In this cohort study with a mean matched cohort size of 554 patients with biopsy-confirmed, localized recurrent prostate cancer, 10-year cancer-specific survival and overall survival were not meaningfully different between salvage focal therapy and salvage radical prostatectomy. The adjusted odds of any and major complications were approximately 24 and 9 times higher, respectively, following salvage radical prostatectomy.

Meaning Salvage focal therapy and salvage radical prostatectomy are both effective for treating localized radiorecurrent prostate cancer, though salvage focal therapy confers fewer perioperative complications.

Abstract

Importance Patients with recurrent prostate cancer after previous radiotherapy typically have poor survival. Those with recurrences prostate confined might be suitable for salvage focal therapy (sFT) or salvage radical prostatectomy (sRP). sFT may offer good cancer control with comparatively less toxic effects, but outcomes beyond 5 years have not been reported, and no study has compared sFT to sRP.

Objective To compare cancer control and perioperative complications among patients after sFT vs sRP.

Design, Setting, and Participants In this international, multicenter cohort study of matched comparison data, patients undergoing sFT were derived from the prospective UK HIFU (high-intensity focused ultrasound) Evaluation and Treatment and International Cryotherapy Evaluation registries (9 centers; 2006-2024) and the prospective UK Focal Recurrent Assessment and Salvage Treatment cohort study (6 centers; 2014-2018). Patients undergoing sRP were derived from an international retrospective registry (12 centers in 8 countries; 2000-2021). Patients with biopsy-confirmed, localized recurrent prostate cancer postradiotherapy, either external beam radiotherapy, brachytherapy, or both, were included. Data were analyzed from March to July 2025.

Exposures sFT using HIFU or cryotherapy vs sRP.

Main Outcomes and Measures The primary outcome was cancer-specific survival up to 10 years. Secondary outcomes were overall survival, any perioperative complications (Clavien-Dindo grades 1-5), and major perioperative complications (Clavien-Dindo grades 3-5). Comparisons were made on matched patients following 1:1 cardinality matching within individual multiply-imputed datasets. Matching variables used were radiotherapeutic treatment, years between primary and salvage treatments, European Association of Urology recurrence risk group, and presalvage age, prostate-specific antigen, prostate volume, grade group, T stage, and androgen-deprivation therapy use.

Results A total of 923 patients were eligible for matching (419 undergoing sFT and 504 undergoing sRP). Of the patients undergoing sFT, 325 (77.6%) underwent HIFU and the remainder cryotherapy, with 241 (57.5%) treated with quadrant ablation. Of patients treated with sRP, 376 (74.6%) underwent open surgery and the remainder robot-assisted surgery. For sFT vs sRP, 10-year cancer-specific survival was 92% (95% CI, 86%-98%) vs 99% (95% CI, 97%-100%), with no statistically significant difference (restricted mean time lost, -0.09 years; 95% CI, -0.22 to 0.03 years; P = .15; subdistribution hazard ratio, 0.45; 95% CI, 0.05-4.00; P = .47). There was no statistically significant difference in 10-year overall survival (restricted mean survival time, -0.13 years; 95% CI, -0.86 to 0.60 years; P = .72). Undergoing sRP was associated with statistically significant higher odds of any complication (adjusted odds ratio, 24.20; 95% CI, 12.94-45.27; P < .001) and major complication (adjusted odds ratio, 9.31; 95% CI, 3.42-25.36; P < .001).

Conclusions and Relevance In this cohort study, sFT and sRP were effective for treating localized radiorecurrent prostate cancer, while sFT was associated with fewer perioperative complications. sFT may provide a favorable therapeutic ratio for many patients with localized radiorecurrent prostate cancer.

医療・健康
ad
ad
Follow
ad
タイトルとURLをコピーしました