Comparative Effectiveness of Proton Therapy Versus Photon Therapy as Part of Concurrent Chemoradiotherapy for Locally Advanced Prostate Cancer

  • Clinical Transformation
Project Status: Complete

This project assesse whether proton therapy is associated improved health outcomes compared to photon chemoradiotherapy. Findings showed that proton chemoradiotherapy was associated a nearly two-thirds reduction in unplanned hospitalizations with similar disease-free and overall survival.

The use of concurrent chemoradiotherapies is a standard curative treatment for many cancers but is associated with substantial morbidity including hospitalizations during treatment. PC3I researchers conducted a study to assess whether proton therapy in the setting of concurrent chemoradiotherpy is associated with fewer 90-day unplanned hospitalizations or other adverse events and similar disease-free and overall survival compared to photon chemoradiotherapy. This was a retrospective non-randomized comparative effectiveness study.

Findings showed that proton chemoradiotherapy was associated a nearly two-thirds reduction in unplanned hospitalizations with similar disease-free and overall survival.

Penn Department of Radiation Oncology; Washington University in St. Louis Department of Radiation Oncology; Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics; Penn Department of Biostatistics, Epidemiology, and Informatics; Abramson Cancer Center.

Project Leads

  • James Metz

    MD

    Chair, Department of Radiation Oncology, Perelman School of Medicine

  • Brian Baumann

    MD

    Radiation Oncologist, HSHS St. John’s Hospital

Project Team

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