Any advice or shared experiences with SpaceOAR Hydrogel?

Posted by billd511 @billd511, 3 days ago

Question:
My urologist has presented the option of using the Boston Scientific SpaceOAR Hydrogel between my prostate and rectum. It can be injected during the gold marker insertion procedure. Has anyone here had experience with this product?
Background:
I’m a 71-year-old in good health, aside from a recent T3a prostate cancer diagnosis. My PSA rose from 11 to 15 over six months. An MRI with contrast revealed multiple prostate masses.
My biopsy results showed:
• Gleason 3+3=6 (Grade Group 1): Found in multiple cores
• Gleason 3+4=7 (Grade Group 2): Found in some cores
• Gleason 4+3=7 (Grade Group 3): Found in several cores, with significant pattern 4 (e.g., fused glands, cribriform architecture)
A PET scan showed no spread beyond the prostate, but my Decipher Genomic Classifier score is 0.98, indicating high metastatic risk.
Treatment Plan:
• 24 months of ADT starting Friday, 2/28/25
• 28 fractions of IMRT beginning 5/1/25
After months of tests, waiting, and appointments, I’m ready to go on the offensive. Any advice or shared experiences with SpaceOAR would be greatly appreciated.

Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Prostate Cancer Support Group.

Bill,

Your situation is almost identical to my own. I am 70 and am currently about 1/3 of the way through radiation treatment, having started the hormone-blocking about three weeks before beginning radiation.

I had the SpaceOAR insert. My radiation oncologist explained it to me and suggested it as a helpful option that I should consider. I read about the insert using some solid sources on the Internet. To avoid peripheral damage to other organs, this just made sense. While not the most pleasant experience (but then, we aren't really in this situation expecting pleasant experiences), it was not significantly more complex than the original biopsy. If you look up the results of its use to date, I believe you will opt for the insert. Of course, in speaking with others at the clinic where I receive my radiation treatments, it is clear that everyone's comfort or discomfort level is different.

Best of luck.

REPLY
@heavyphil

Ahhh, now I see….You learn something new on this forum every day. I had only seen fiducials used in Cyberknife. My sessions were salvage - NO PROSTATE. So they did a cone beam Xray every day (built into the TruBeam) before treatment to check for rectal gas, bladder fullness, and proper positioning.
I had no gel spacer since there could be cells near the rectum and they had to hit those too. My PET was also “clear”, but we all know what that means.
Glad you are doing well.
Phil

Jump to this post

I don’t believe a spacer is ever used for salvage radiation. The spacer goes between the prostate and the rectum, so without a prostate there is no place to put the spacer.

REPLY
@dgd1953

I don’t believe a spacer is ever used for salvage radiation. The spacer goes between the prostate and the rectum, so without a prostate there is no place to put the spacer.

Jump to this post

Yup….and even if they could devise a barrier external to the rectum, it would be counter- productive for salvage cases.

REPLY
@heavyphil

Ahhh, now I see….You learn something new on this forum every day. I had only seen fiducials used in Cyberknife. My sessions were salvage - NO PROSTATE. So they did a cone beam Xray every day (built into the TruBeam) before treatment to check for rectal gas, bladder fullness, and proper positioning.
I had no gel spacer since there could be cells near the rectum and they had to hit those too. My PET was also “clear”, but we all know what that means.
Glad you are doing well.
Phil

Jump to this post

I did Spaceoar, I did not like the shape of it as it only came about 60% down the prostate. I had my urologist review ( Spaceoar recommended ) and a Hopkins trained RO walk through individual dosage to every part of my body. I still think about it but I was at a center of excellence. My point is to make sure and review your CT/MRI and ask questions, it needs to be in properly not just injected.

REPLY
@dgd1953

I don’t believe a spacer is ever used for salvage radiation. The spacer goes between the prostate and the rectum, so without a prostate there is no place to put the spacer.

Jump to this post

SpaceOAR after prostatectomy is very rarely done, but it apparently can be done to reduce radiation dose to the rectum. I think it’s because most believe SpaceOAR’s only use is to distance the rectum from the prostate being radiated, when it’s actual purpose is to distance the rectum from whatever is being radiated.
As these papers point out, SpaceOAR can be used in the salvage radiation setting to distance the rectum from the local cancer recurrence where the prostate was.
Here are papers from 2015 about this:
> https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25339311/

> https://abstracts.mirrorsmed.org/abstracts/feasibility-spacer-insertion-dose-escalated-post-prostatectomy-radiotherapy-pprt-and

Here is a paper from 2019 about this: https://medcraveonline.com/IJRRT/IJRRT-06-00224.pdf

REPLY
@neilmartin

I did Spaceoar, I did not like the shape of it as it only came about 60% down the prostate. I had my urologist review ( Spaceoar recommended ) and a Hopkins trained RO walk through individual dosage to every part of my body. I still think about it but I was at a center of excellence. My point is to make sure and review your CT/MRI and ask questions, it needs to be in properly not just injected.

Jump to this post

That’s why the newer product (Barrigel) is sometimes preferred over SpaceOAR. Barrigel allows more control of where the gel is placed. Unlike with SpaceOAR, Barrigel can be sculpted in place to create a custom fit to one’s anatomy.

REPLY

I had SpaceOAR injected prior to my 28 sessions of proton radiation (April-May 2021).
SpaceOAR increases the perirectal space - by just over 1cm (about 1/3”). It’s easy to deal with and worthwhile moving the rectum out of the radiation field. (I’ve heard that it reduces radiation to the rectum by ~70%.)
Studies show that SpaceOAR not only reduces rectal radiation dose, but also protects from late GI and GU toxicities, with urinary, bowel, and sexual quality-of-life improvement: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34029607/
I used the newer SpaceOAR Vue product, which is a modification of the standard SpaceOAR Hydrogel, containing approximately 1% iodine bound to the hydrogel to be more visible under CT scan. (We did not use fiducial markers.)
I had no adverse side-effects from the SpaceOAR injection. Yes, there was some bleeding and pain at the injection site (which is to be expected). I’d recommend that you ask them to be generous with the lidocaine (or whatever it is called that they use to numb the areas), both where they penetrate the skin and all the way ahead of where they’re injecting the gel.

REPLY
Please sign in or register to post a reply.