Purpose: Using a rigorous prostate-specific antigen definition of disease-freedom, the 10-year disease-free survival rates after simultaneous radiation of prostate cancer are presented.

Patients And Materials: From January 1984 through December 1996, 1020 men with clinical stage T1T2N0 prostate cancer were treated by simultaneous radiation: radioactive 125I prostate implantation followed by external-beam radiation. The median pretreatment prostate-specific antigen was 7.5 ng/mL (range, 0.2-188 ng/mL). Implantation was performed by both the retropubic and the transperineal technique, always followed by external-beam radiation. None received hormone treatment. Disease freedom is defined as achieving and maintaining a posttreatment prostate-specific antigen of < or = 0.5 ng/mL. The median follow-up is 3 years (range, 1-14 years).

Results: The overall 5- and 10-year disease-free survival rates are 79% and 72%, respectively, after which a plateau is reached. At 5 years posttreatment, significantly better disease-free survival results are documented with simultaneous radiation by the ultrasound technique (92%) compared with the retropubic implant technique (73%). On multivariate analysis, pretreatment prostate-specific antigen is the most significant factor associated with disease-free survival, followed by implant technique.

Discussion: The 10-year disease-free survival rate after simultaneous radiation is comparable to the 10-year results after radical prostatectomy. Disease freedom is defined by the same prostate-specific antigen criteria used for surgery. A plateau in the disease-free curve suggests cure. Of equal importance, the information described in this report should form only a baseline relative to future results as men treated with simultaneous radiation using the transperineal implant technique reach longer follow-up.

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