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Principles and practice of high-dose rate penile brachytherapy: Planning and delivery techniques.

PURPOSE: To allow for organ preservation, high-dose rate (HDR) brachytherapy may be used in the treatment of localized penile cancer. Penile cancer is a rare malignancy that accounts for <1% of cancers in men in the United States. The standard treatment for localized disease is partial amputation of the penis. However, patients with T1b or T2 disease <4 cm in maximum dimension and confined to the glans penis may be treated with brachytherapy as an organ-sparing approach. Previous works have described the technique involved for low-dose rate brachytherapy; however, we detail the techniques involved with HDR brachytherapy.

METHODS AND MATERIALS: Circumcision should precede brachytherapy. Interstitial brachytherapy needles are placed in the operating room under general anesthesia with the goal to allow for appropriate target coverage. Target definition is done via computed tomography-based simulation and planning. Radiation is delivered using a prescription dose of 3840 cGy in 12 fractions twice daily over a course of 6 days.

RESULTS: Acute toxicities peak upon completion of the radiation therapy and may include dermatitis, sterile urethritis, and adhesions in the urethra. These toxicities are reversible and generally take 2 to 3 months to heal. The two most common and significant late complications of radiation therapy for penile cancer are soft tissue necrosis and meatal stenosis. An increased risk of necrosis has been reported with T3 tumors and higher-volume implants (>30 cm3 ). Erectile function is generally maintained because the erectile tissues including the penile shaft and corpora have not been irradiated.

CONCLUSIONS: Organ preservation is feasible using HDR brachytherapy with favorable acute and late toxicities.

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