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Journal of Contemporary Brachytherapy
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4/2014
vol. 6
 
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Original paper
Prostate brachytherapy in New South Wales: patterns of care study and impact of caseload on treatment quality

Stephen R. Thompson
,
Geoff P. Delaney
,
Gabriel S. Gabriel
,
Michael A. Izard
,
George Hruby
,
Raj Jagavkar
,
Joseph Bucci
,
Michael B. Barton

J Contemp Brachytherapy 2014; 6, 4: 344–349
Online publish date: 2014/11/12
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Purpose

Retrospective patterns of care studies (POCS) seek to improve the quality of technical care by examining processes, structures, and/or outcomes of care. The rationale is that differences exist in care, that these differences can be measured against explicit criteria and against each other, that deficiencies in care may affect outcome, and that these deficiencies, having been identified, are correctable, thereby improving patient outcome [1,2]. This is the first comprehensive, population-based brachytherapy (BT) POCS in the Australian setting. Collection of these data enabled an overview of actual NSW BT use for comparison with our model of optimal BT utilization [3]. A second aim was to assess the technical quality of BT practice by comparing with known quality benchmarks. Herein we focus on these results as they pertain to prostate BT quality.

Material and methods

A retrospective BT POCS for NSW residents treated in 2003 was performed in 2005. Site visits were made to all radiation oncology departments in NSW that delivered BT. Data were collected by the primary author and entered into an access database and then transferred into SPSS v15.0. Logic checks and frequency analyses were performed on the data to identify errors and inconsistencies.
Overall quality of NSW prostate BT treatment was assessed using near-contemporaneous published benchmarks drawn from evidence-based peer-reviewed guidelines, including: treatment of appropriate prostate cancer disease risk category [4-9], absence of (relative) physical contraindications to BT [4-6,10], optimal planned and treated dosimetry [5], and pre/post-implant planning/CT [4,5]. Quality was compared between higher and lower caseload departments. These were defined as: the two departments that performed more permanent prostate seed BT (SBT) compared with the two departments that performed fewer (institution numbers 2 and 5, versus 1 and 3); and the two departments that performed more temporary high dose rate (HDR)/pulsed dose rate (PDR) iridium-192 brachytherapy (TBT) were compared to the two departments that performed fewer (institution numbers 3 and 5, versus 2 and 4).
Categorical variables were compared using Pearson χ2 test, with data entered as counts and analysed as proportions. Ordering of variables was addressed by testing for Linear Trend. Means of two variables were compared using two-sample t-test (two-tailed), and variance was tested using Levene’s test for homogeneity of variance.
All institutions and patients were de-identified. Permission for the study was obtained from all relevant Radiation Oncology Departmental Directors and Human Research Ethics Committees. The study was carried out in accordance with the Helsinki Declaration.

Results

In NSW in 2003, 260 patients were treated with prostate BT (47% of all NSW BT) at five institutions. After exclusion of 24 patients resident interstate, 236 NSW prostate cancer patients remained as the cohort of this study undergoing BT. Temporary brachyhterapy was administered to 157 (67%) patients and 79 (33%) received SBT. Institutional caseload is shown in Table 1. The two higher caseload SBT institutions treated 32 and 37 SBT patients, compared to 1 and 9 patients in the two lower caseload SBT institutions. The two higher caseload TBT institutions treated 47 and 80 TBT patients, the two lower caseload TBT institutions treated 14 and 16 patients. One department had a temporarily inactive prostate BT programme due to resource constraints and only treated one patient. Of the other four departments, three treated more than the previous UK recommended minimum of 25 cases (SBT + TBT) [11,12].
Mean patient age was 67 years. Prostate TBT patients were older than SBT patients (mean 69 vs. 64 years, p < 0.001), with a greater proportion being greater than 65 years (75% vs. 44%, p < 0.001). Prostate cancer T stage, Gleason score and PSA are combined to create low risk (LR), intermediate risk (IR) and high risk (HR) disease ca­tegories, as per the NCCN recommendations [6]. Prostate cancer treatment by institution and risk category is shown in Table 1.
Seed brachytherapy monotherapy is contraindicated in HR disease [4-8], this criterion was met in 99% of SBT patients. Temporary brachyhterapy (with EBRT) is indicated for patients with non-metastatic disease [6,9], with this criterion being achieved in 98% of patients. There was no significant difference between departments by caseload.
Relative physical contraindications to prostate BT are: very large prostates (> 40-60 cc); significant lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS), with International Prostate Symptom Score (IPSS) cut-off being 0-9, 0-15, or 0-19; and prior trans-urethral resection of prostate (TURP) [4-6,10]. Temporary brachyhterapy patients were more likely to have larger prostates than SBT patients: (37% vs. 26% > 40 cc, including 9% vs. 0% > 60 cc, p = 0.03). For SBT, there was no difference by caseload, whereas patients in lower caseload TBT departments were more likely to have large prostates (14% vs. 7% > 60 cc, p = 0.012). Data on pre-treatment IPSS were available for 93 (39%) patients. Mean IPSS was 4.2 (range 0-16). Only one patient scored greater than 15 (score 16). There was no difference in average IPSS or proportions of patients having mild (IPSS 0-9) or moderate (IPSS 10-19) LUTS by BT type (p = 0.63) or by caseload amongst SBT patients (p = 0.68), but more TBT patients at lower caseload departments had moderate LUTS (20% vs. 3%, p = 0.048). Six percent of SBT patients had prior TURP compared to 15% of TBT patients (p = 0.048), but there was no association with caseload.

Permanent iodine-125 seed brachytherapy

In all cases, planning was conducted as a day-stay procedure, 145 Gy was prescribed to the covering 100% isodose using iodine-125 seeds, and insertion was then under general anaesthetic as day-only or overnight. Other implant descriptors are tabulated (Table 2).
Post-implant CT to calculate dosimetry is recommend­ed for all patients [4,5] and was performed on 69 (87%) of 79 patients with no difference by caseload. Prescribed and received doses are shown in Figure 1. The data indicate that prescribed dosimetry was superior in terms of prostate coverage and dose homogeneity compared to that actually achieved. Optimal implant is one, in which D90 (dose in Gy covering > 90% of target) > 140 Gy [5], this was prescribed in all cases and 71% received at least this dose, with no difference by caseload. Mean prescribed D90 was greater in lower SBT caseload departments (185 Gy vs. 177 Gy, p < 0.001) with less variation (p = 0.01) and prescribed V150 (% target volume covered by 150% of prescribed dose) was greater in lower SBT departments (62% vs. 56% of prostate, p = 0.01) with less variation (p = 0.01). There was no significant difference by caseload in received D90 and V150 and in prescribed/received V200 and V100.

Temporary Iridium-192 high-dose-rate/pulsed-dose-rate brachytherapy

Treatment protocols varied between departments and are detailed in Table 3, and the boxplot in Figure 2 shows dose parameters prescribed.
There was greater variability in D90 and V100 in lower caseload compared to higher caseload institutions (p = 0.017 and p = 0.001, respectively) with no difference in their means. Mean V150 and V200 were significantly lower in higher caseload departments (27% vs. 36%, p < 0.001 and 9% vs. 15%, p < 0.001). By extrapolation from SBT data [5], optimal D90 is believed to be at least as great as the prescribed dose. This was achieved in 86% of cases (90% vs. 71%, higher/lower caseload, p = 0.039).

Discussion

Brachytherapy for the treatment of prostate cancer has a well-established role [13]. In NSW in 2003, 67% of prostate BT patients were treated with TBT, always as a boost with EBRT, and almost always for patients with IR-HR disease. Thirty-three percent were treated with SBT, almost all monotherapy, generally for patients with LR disease. This is markedly different to the American experience, with the USA POCS for 1999 revealing that only 10% of BT treatments were TBT (69% combined with EBRT and 31% monotherapy) and 90% were permanent SBT [14]. This difference in the type of BT used between Australia and USA is likely to be explained by differences in funding arrangements, which has had the practical result that in Australia permanent SBT is almost entirely limited to monotherapy of privately insured patients with LR disease, and TBT is generally used as a boost to EBRT to treat both public and private patients with IR-HR disease [3].
Prostate BT in NSW generally corresponded to guideline recommendations, with benchmarks achieved in 85-99% of cases. Seed brachytherapy (monotherapy) is contraindicated in HR disease [4-8], and TBT (with EBRT) is contraindicated for patients with metastatic disease [6,9]. These criteria were met in > 98% of patients. This is similar to the American experience: in the 1999, prostate BT POCS only 1.1% of SBT (monotherapy) patients had HR disease [14]. Few NSW patients were treated in the presence of relative physical contra-indications (prior TURP, large prostate size, and significant LUTS). Temporary brachyhterapy patients were more likely than SBT patients to have large prostates or to have undergone prior TURP. This difference probably reflects technical differences between the two modalities and the fact that the evidence that TBT patients have greater toxicity in the presence of these contraindications is weaker and more recent than in the setting of SBT [4-6] with only one guideline listing these factors as a contra-indication to TBT [10].
New South Wales SBT practice was in line with the American [5] and European [4] technical recommenda­tions. All NSW patients appropriately underwent pre- planning, and 145 Gy was prescribed to the covering 100% isodose in all cases. Post-implant CT was performed for 69 of 79 patients (86%) in NSW, compared to only 47% of patients in the 1999 US POCS [14]. In NSW, D90 > 140 Gy was achieved to 71% of patients. This compares favourably with published series from large institutions: 43% at Leeds [15] and 58% at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center [16]. New South Wales TBT boost practice also corresponded well to guideline technical recommendations [10]. Although no dose response data have been determined from the literature, there is a commonly used range of doses that have been shown to be efficacious: 45-54 Gy EBRT and 12-20 Gy in 2-4 fractions TBT boost [10]. All but two patients were treated within this dose range, and the NSW departments routinely assessed dose to organs at risk.
An important issue for prostate BT is whether BT caseload affects BT quality. This has been shown to be the case for cervical cancer brachytherapy [17]. The Royal College of Radiologists of the UK have previously recommended a minimum of 25 prostate BT cases be treated per centre per year, and a minimum of 5 cases per physician per year, although no studies were referenced to support these recommendations [11]. In NSW, prostate BT was highly concentrated: of 15 NSW radiation oncology departments, only five delivered prostate BT. Prostate BT workload per centre in NSW was comparable to that of the UK and greater than continental Europe (Table 4). Three of four NSW departments with active prostate BT programmes in 2003 treated more than the UK recommended minimum.
In the case of permanent SBT, there were no differences by caseload with regard to likelihood of treating in the presence of physical contra-indications to BT, use of post-implant CT, or prescribed/delivered D90, with only minor differences in other dosimetric parameters. For patients treated with TBT, there were some differences in likelihood of treating according to guideline recommendations by caseload: patients in lower TBT caseload departments were more likely to have large prostates > 60 cc (14% vs. 7%), but the limited data regarding greater risk of urinary toxicity with large prostate volumes in TBT patients emerged only after 2003 [10,22-25], and therefore the applicability of using this measure as a quality benchmark for the 2003 NSW POCS is questionable. Patients in the lower caseload TBT departments were more likely to have moderate LUTS as measured by IPSS (20% vs. 3%), although no patients in either type of department had severe symptoms, this being the group at greatest risk of urinary retention after BT. There was no difference in prior TURP by caseload. Although there were some differences in dosimetry by caseload (with less variability in D90 and V100 and greater likelihood of D90 being greater than the prescribed dose), there are no dose response data, and therefore no dose parameters that define an optimal TBT implant [10].
Thus, despite a broad literature showing the existence of a learning curve and an effect of provider volume on outcomes following prostate BT, ranging from first 10-20 cases, but with an effect detectable out to to hundreds [26-31], we were unable to consistently demonstrate this effect. There may be a number of reasons why the current study did not find a strong caseload effect on indicators of prostate BT quality, despite good evidence in the literature for this effect. There is a lack of robust dosimetry quality benchmarks for TBT, although the detected greater variability in D90 and V100 at the lower caseload departments may be clinically significant. Although the sample included 236 prostate BT patients, these were treated in only five departments by six brachytherapists, and therefore the number of institutions is probably too small to detect a difference. One interpretation may be that the high overall quality of prostate BT in NSW may indeed confirm a caseload effect, with three of the four active departments achieving the previous UK benchmark rate of > 25 cases/year. In these four departments, all prostate brachytherapists were treating well above the UK benchmark rate of > 5 cases/year. By 2003, all the NSW brachytherapists at the four active departments had performed many more than the standard learning curve caseload of 10-20. Even at the lower caseload departments, numbers appeared small due to resource constraints or the BT programmes having only just commenced, but the brachytherapists themselves were generally experienced. It may be that for quality, overall brachytherapist experience and having passed beyond the learning curve is more important than absolute numbers in any one calendar year.
This study did have a number of limitations. It was retrospective, and represents state-of-play in 2003, and therefore not necessarily reflecting current NSW practice. Nevertheless, no data have yet emerged implying that new technologies have rendered brachytherapist experience/technical skill inconsequential, and therefore we believe that these data assessing caseload and quality remain relevant. The study included only five departments. Robust TBT treatment quality indicators against, which performance can be measured are lacking. Importantly, this study reports technical factors, but not clinical outcome data for both disease control and toxicity. These are areas in which future research is likely to be beneficial.

Conclusions

In NSW in 2003 prostate BT, as measured by concordance with guideline recommendations and dosimetry parameters, was of high quality. No consistent provider caseload effect on treatment quality was found. These results may be because prostate BT was concentrated in a small number of departments, with generally high departmental caseload.

Disclosure

Authors report no conflict of interest.

This manuscript is based on data presented at the following Scientific Meetings: The Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Radiologists 56th Annual Scientific Meeting, Sydney, October 2005; Australasian Brachytherapy Group 18th Annual Scientific Meeting, Brisbane, March 2009; The Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Radiologists 61st Annual Scientific Meeting, Perth, October 2010 [1].

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