Gordon L. Grado
Mayo Clinic
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Urology | 1999
Gordon L. Grado; Joseph M. Collins; J. Scott Kriegshauser; Carrie S. Balch; Mary M. Grado; Gregory P. Swanson; Thayne R. Larson; Mahlon M. Wilkes; Roberta J. Navickis
OBJECTIVES To evaluate the effectiveness and morbidity of salvage brachytherapy for locally recurrent or persistent prostate cancer after radiotherapy failure. METHODS In this retrospective study, 49 patients of median age 73.3 years (range 52.9 to 86.9) with biopsy-proven localized prostate cancer underwent interactive transperineal fluoroscopic-guided and biplane ultrasound-guided brachytherapy with either iodine 125 or palladium 103 after prior radiotherapy failure. Post-treatment follow-up was conducted for a median of 64.1 months (range 26.6 to 96.8) and included clinical assessment of disease status, assays of serum prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels, and documentation of treatment-related symptoms and complications. Determination of biochemical treatment failure was based on two successive rising PSA values above the post-treatment PSA nadir value. RESULTS The actuarial rate of local prostate cancer control was 98% (95% confidence interval [CI] 94% to 99%). Actuarial disease-specific survival at 3 and 5 years was 89% (95% CI 73% to 96%) and 79% (95% CI 58% to 91%), respectively. At 3 and 5 years, actuarial biochemical disease-free survival was 48% (95% CI 32% to 63%) and 34% (95% CI 17% to 51%), respectively. Post-treatment PSA nadir was found to be a significant predictor of biochemical disease-free survival. Actuarial biochemical disease-free survival of patients who achieved a PSA nadir less than 0.5 ng/mL was 77% (95% CI 53% to 90%) and 56% (95% CI 25% to 78%) at 3 and 5 years, respectively. Of 49 patients, 23 (47%) achieved a post-treatment PSA nadir less than 0.5 ng/mL. The incidence of serious complications after salvage brachytherapy, such as incontinence and rectal complications, was lower than that reported after other types of salvage procedures. CONCLUSIONS Interactive transperineal fluoroscopic-guided and biplane ultrasound-guided brachytherapy is a novel, potentially curative salvage modality for patients in whom prior radiotherapy failed. In a population of patients with poor prognosis, this modality was associated with a high rate of local prostate cancer control and a 34% actuarial rate of biochemical disease-free survival at 5 years. The incidence of major complications after salvage brachytherapy appears to be lower than that after other potentially curative salvage procedures, such as radical prostatectomy and cryoablation. Salvage brachytherapy warrants further investigation.
International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 1998
Gordon L. Grado; Thayne R. Larson; Carrie S. Balch; Mary M. Grado; Joseph M. Collins; J. Scott Kriegshauser; Gregory P. Swanson; Roberta J. Navickis; Mahlon M. Wilkes
PURPOSE To evaluate the effectiveness and safety of interactive transperineal brachytherapy under biplane ultrasound and fluoroscopic guidance in patients with localized prostate cancer. METHODS AND MATERIALS Brachytherapy using 125I or 103Pd radioactive seeds either alone or in combination with adjunctive external beam radiotherapy (XRT) was administered to 490 patients at a single institution. Post-treatment follow-up included clinical assessment of disease status, assays of serum prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels and documentation of treatment-related symptoms and complications. RESULTS Actuarial disease-free survival at 5 yr was 79% (95% CI, 71-85%), and the 5-yr actuarial rate of local control was 98% (95% CI, 94-99%). Post-treatment PSA nadir and pretreatment PSA level were found to be significant predictors of disease-free survival. In patients with a PSA nadir < 0.5 ng/ml, 5-yr disease-free survival was 93% (95% CI, 84-97%), compared with 25% (95% CI, 5-53%) in patients whose PSA nadir was 0.5-1.0 ng/ml and 15% (95% CI, 3-38) in patients with a PSA nadir > 1.0 ng/ml. Brachytherapy was well tolerated with few post-treatment complications. CONCLUSION A broad range of patients with localized prostate cancer can benefit from transperineal brachytherapy with minimal morbidity. A post-treatment PSA nadir below 0.5 ng/ml provides a useful prognostic indicator of favorable long-term outcome.
International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 1996
Steven E. Schild; William W. Wong; Gordon L. Grado; Michele Y. Halyard; Donald E. Novicki; Scott K. Swanson; Thayne R. Larson; Robert G. Ferrigni
PURPOSE The results of therapy in 288 men with pathologic Stage C prostate cancer who underwent radical retropubic prostatectomy (RRP) were analyzed to determine the effects of adjuvant therapy. METHODS AND MATERIALS Twenty-seven of the 288 patients received preoperative neoadjuvant hormonal therapy (leuprolide acetate). Postoperatively, 60 patients received adjuvant radiotherapy (RT) to the prostate bed. Follow-up ranged from 3 to 83 months (median = 32 months). Freedom from failure (FFF) was defined as maintaining a serum PSA level of < or = 0.3 ng/ml. RESULTS The FFF was 61% at 3 years and 45% at 5 years for the entire group. The FFF following RRP plus RT was 75% at 3 years and 57% at 5 years as compared to 56% at 3 years and 40% at 5 years for RRP without RT (p=0.049). The FFF following RRP plus neoadjuvant hormonal therapy was 58% at 3 years and 40% at 5 years as compared to 60% at 3 years and 45% at 5 years following RRP without hormonal therapy (p=0.3). In patients without seminal vesicle (SV) invasion, the FFF was 81% at 3 years and 5 years for RRP plus RT as compared to 61% at 3 years and 50% at 5 years for RRP without RT (p=0.01). In patients with SV invasion, the FFF was 61% at 3 years and 36% at 5 years for RRP plus RT as compared to 44% at 3 years and 23% at 5 years for RRP without RT (p=0.23). The projected local control rate was 83% at 5 years for those with RRP alone as compared to 100% for RRP plus RT (p=0.02). Survival at 5 years was projected to be 92% and was not significantly altered by the administration of adjuvant therapies. CONCLUSIONS Postoperative RT was associated with significantly improved local control and FFF rates, especially in patients with tumors which did not involve the seminal vesicles.
Head and Neck-journal for The Sciences and Specialties of The Head and Neck | 1997
Robert L. Foote; Steven J. Buskirk; Gordon L. Grado; James A. Bonner
External beam radiotherapy and surgery produce equivalent long‐term survival and tumor control in early glottic cancer. The expense and cost of radiotherapy have been challenged.
Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 1997
Ricardo N. Goes; Robert W. Beart; Anthony J. Simons; Leonard L. Gunderson; Gordon L. Grado; Oscar Streeter
PURPOSE: Locally recurrent rectal cancer is associated with poor quality of life and has justified aggressive surgical and adjuvant approaches to control the disease. This study was designed to evaluate if the use of brachytherapy in association with wide surgical excision (debulking operation) can offer reasonable palliation for patients with locally recurrent rectal cancer. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Patients with biopsy-proven locally recurrent rectal cancer who were not candidates for intraoperative radiation therapy and who were previously considered as having unresectable tumors were included in the study and were followed-up from May 1981 to November 1990. All of them had undergone laparotomy and had either radical or debulking surgical resection performed. At the same time, brachytherapy was used with temporary or permanent implant of seeds of iridium-192 or iodine-125. RESULTS: Thirty patients were included. Patients ranged in age from 28 to 74 years, and 16 patients were female. No mortality was observed, and morbidity was low (small-bowel obstruction (1 patient), intestinal fistula (1 patient), and urinary fistula (1 patient). Histologic examination of the specimen showed gross residual disease in 67 percent of patients and microscopic disease in 25 percent of patients. Long-term follow-up was possible in 28 patients. Mean follow-up and local control were, respectively, 26.5 months and 37.5 percent for gross residual disease and 34 months and 66 percent for microscopic residual disease. Eighteen patients (64 percent) had locally recurrent rectal cancer under control at the time of the last follow-up, with seven patients (25 percent) having no evidence of local or distant recurrence. CONCLUSION: This is the first report of brachytherapy for locally recurrent rectal cancer. This appears to offer a therapeutic alternative to patients who are not candidates for intraoperative radiation therapy. Surgical morbidity and mortality are acceptable. Local control in 18 patients (64 percent) is comparable with intraoperative radiation therapy or more morbid surgical alternatives. Cancer-related deaths are most often related to disseminated disease, which suggests the need for systemic therapy in addition to brachytherapy.
Mayo Clinic Proceedings | 1994
William W. Wong; James R. Pluth; Gordon L. Grado; Steven E. Schild; David R. Sanderson
Pleural liposarcomas are extremely rare; only eight cases have been reported in the literature. Herein we describe a 38-year-old man who had dyspnea on exertion and chest pain. Computed tomography of the chest revealed a large mass in the right pleural cavity. Thoracotomy was performed, and the patient recovered with no complications. Postoperative adjuvant irradiation was successful. In addition to the current case, we review the previously reported cases of pleural liposarcomas and discuss the treatment outcomes.
Mayo Clinic Proceedings | 1992
Robert L. Foote; Kerry D. Olsen; Susan J. Kunselman; Daniel J. Schaid; Steven J. Buskirk; Gordon L. Grado; John D. Earle
Between January 1975 and December 1985, 45 patients with carcinoma in situ or invasive squamous cell carcinoma of the glottic larynx received radiation therapy at the Mayo Clinic. Local control in the entire group of 45 patients was 84% (in 6 of 6 with carcinoma in situ and in 32 of 39 with invasive cancers). Three of seven patients (43%) with local recurrences underwent successful larynx-preserving surgical procedures; thus, the rate of laryngeal preservation was 91%. In our study of several treatment factors, including the duration of treatment, type of treatment (continuous course versus split course), photon energy (60Co versus 4-MV photons versus 6-MV photons), total dose, and dose per fraction, we found that only total dose of 6,300 cGy or more was associated with significantly improved local control (in 35 of 38 patients [92%]). Two patients (4%) died of uncontrolled delayed nodal metastases, one of which was preceded by a local recurrence. Severe laryngeal edema developed in two patients, associated with recurrent glottic carcinoma in one of them. No larynx was lost because of complications. In our current treatment recommendations, patients receive a total dose of 6,300 cGy in 28 fractions of 225 cGy each, administered in a continuous course with use of 6-MV photons.
American Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1996
Michele Y. Halyard; Gordon L. Grado; Paula J. Schomberg; Amy L. Weaver; Clive S. Grant; Thomas M. Pisansky
PURPOSE A retrospective analysis of patients with intraductal and early-stage invasive breast cancer treated with breast-conserving surgery and radiation was conducted to determine the local recurrence and survival rates. Between January 1979 and December 1989, 181 patients were treated with breast-conserving surgery and definitive radiation. Nine of these patients also had either synchronous or metachronous bilateral breast cancers also treated with breast conservation. Fourteen cases were intraductal cancer, while the remaining were invasive carcinomas. With a median length of patient follow-up of 4.9 years following initiation of radiation, the overall survival at 5 and 8 years was 93% and 83%, respectively. The local recurrence-free survival at both 5 and 8 years for all patients was 96%. The overall and recurrence-free survival of the intraductal patients alone was 100% at 5 years. Lymph node status and grade were identified as variables associated with time until recurrence based on a stepwise Cox proportional hazards model analysis. Physician assessment of cosmesis was ranked as good to excellent in 82% of patients. This study further substantiates the role of breast-conserving surgery and definitive radiation in the treatment of early-stage breast cancer.
Mayo Clinic Proceedings | 1994
Robert L. Foote; Rainer U. Hilgenfeld; Susan J. Kunselman; Daniel J. Schaid; Steven J. Buskirk; Gordon L. Grado; John D. Earle
OBJECTIVE To characterize the patient population referred for radiation therapy for tonsillar cancer and to assess the effectiveness of use of only radiation therapy in this population. DESIGN We retrospectively reviewed the medical records of 21 patients referred to the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, from 1970 through 1988 for radiation therapy for squamous cell carcinoma of the tonsillar region. MATERIAL AND METHODS The median age of the 21 study patients was 65 years (range, 45 to 92), and the male:female ratio was 12:9. In all patients, follow-up continued until death or for 2.25 to 16.25 years. Of the 21 patients, 17 had tumors that were either surgically unresectable or medically inoperable, and 20 had clinical stage III or IV disease. The median total dose of irradiation was 55 Gy. RESULTS Local control of the tonsillar cancer was as follows: T2, four of five patients; T3, seven of seven; and T4, five of nine. Thus, the local control rate was 76%. No associations were discovered among local control, total dose of radiation therapy, dose per fraction, overall duration of treatment, age, sex, or reason for referral for radiation therapy. Control of metastatic cervical adenopathy was as follows: clinical stage N1, seven of seven patients; N2, six of seven; and N3, one of one. (Six study patients had no nodal involvement.) The estimated 5-year cause-specific survival and overall survival rates were 77% and 31%, respectively. CONCLUSION This study substantiates the effectiveness of radiation therapy in patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the tonsil.
Mayo Clinic Proceedings | 1993
William M. Thompson; Robert L. Foote; Kerry D. Olsen; Daniel J. Schaid; Gordon L. Grado; Steven J. Buskirk; John D. Earle
From January 1975 through July 1987 at the Mayo Clinic, 16 patients received postoperative adjuvant radiation therapy for squamous cell carcinoma of the tonsil (pathologic stage I in 4 patients, stage III in 3, and stage IV in 9). Follow-up was continued for a minimum of 2 years or until death. At 5 years, overall survival was 74% and disease-free survival was 68% for the entire group of patients. The local-regional control rate at 5 years was 83% for 12 patients with pathologic stage III or IV disease; the 5-year disease-free survival rate was 74%. The results with use of postoperative irradiation for stage III or IV tonsillar cancer seem superior to those for a similar historical group of patients who underwent surgical treatment only. Because the number of patients was small and the analysis was retrospective, our study may have included some undetected bias.