Showing posts with label chemohyperthermia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chemohyperthermia. Show all posts

Thursday 15 February 2024

Update on current management of NMIBC

 

Theories behind Bacillus Calmette-Guérin failure in high-risk non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer and update on current management


A new article written by Ms. Louise Paramore, Ms. Hanna Maroof and Mr Ahmed Ali, Clinical Lead, from the Department of Urology, Frimley Park Hospital NHS Trust, discusses in depth the mechanisms of action and pathophysiology of BCG, potential theories behind BCG failure, and the scope of novel treatments for this surgical conundrum.

Published on Cancer Pathogenesis and Therapy


Synergo technology was presented in the article as one of the treatment options for patients who develop recurrence during BCG treatment or those who cannot tolerate the side effects.


Synergo technology provides an advanced therapeutic option for NMIBC patients. The treatment is based on local RF and tissue hyperthermia in combination with simultaneously cooled chemotherapy instillation.

RF is delivered locally to the bladder wall via a miniaturised, embedded antenna.

RF has been shown to have a selective effect on cancer cells. Synergo’s powerful combination enables the drug to access those cells and in-between them, resulting in higher cell uptake and a higher rate of DNA bonding.

Wednesday 9 November 2022

Synergo in a rare case of T1 bladder cancer

Synergo® in a rare case of T1 bladder cancer

Bladder cancer is a rare phenomenon in children, with an incidence rate of 0.1-0.4% during the first two decades of their lives.

A recent new article (2022) published in the Journal of Pediatric Urology by Dr. Galia Raisin and Prof. Boris Chartin from Shaare Zedek Medical Center (Jerusalem) summarizes their experience and treatment outcomes in nine children, seven of whom are male (78%).

A single case of high-grade disease (UC pT1) was diagnosed in a 14-year-old girl, a kidney transplant recipient. Due to her immune status, she was ineligible for BCG treatment and therefore received 6 Synergo sessions, with no recurrence to date - at a follow-up of 4 years.

Galiya R, Stanislav K, Jawdat J, Benjamin H, Boris C. Pediatric urothelial bladder neoplasm. J Pediatr Urol. 2022 Jun 30:S1477-5131(22)00293-5. doi: 10.1016/j.jpurol.2022.06.026. Epub ahead of print. PMID: 35871900.





Monday 17 January 2022

Synergo RF-CHT is effective in non-muscle invasive bladder cancer patients in whom standard intravesical treatments have failed and should be considered in patients who are unwilling or unfit to undergo radical cystectomy.

Long-Term Experience with Radiofrequency-Induced Hyperthermia Combined with Intravesical Chemotherapy for Non-Muscle Invasive Bladder Cancer.

We are honoured to share a peer-reviewed article on Synergo published in Cancers 2021 Journal by Iris S. G. Brummelhuis et al. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33498535/

Their work concludes that Synergo is effective in NMIBC patients in whom standard intravesical treatments have failed and should be considered in patients who are unwilling or unfit to undergo radical cystectomy.

Patients characteristics:

299 intensively pretreated patients. Of these, 274 patients who fulfilled induction treatments were included in efficacy analysis. 

BCG-unresponsive NMIBC: 85.4% of the patients (BCG Refractory: 65% and BCG Intolerant 7.7%).

Patients with CIS with or without concomitant papillary tumor: 46.7% of the patients.

Results following Synergo treatment:

For CIS, six-month complete response -rate was 56.0%; and durable response rates were 79.7%, 66.5%, and 40.3% at one-, two- and five-year, respectively. 

Recurrence free survival rates for papillary patients were 77.9%, 57.5%, and 37.2%, at one-, two- and five-year, respectively respectively. 

Patients treated with ablative dose are less likely to develop recurrence (adjusted Hazard Ratio 0.54, p = 0.01), compared to adjuvant dose.


In total, 22 (8.5%) of all patients progressed to MIBC, of whom 20 had a high-grade tumor prior to RF-CHT and all 22 patients previously have been treated with BCG (21 BCG refractory, 1 unknown reason for BCG discontinuation). Eleven (4.3%) patients had distant metastases up to one year after treatment.
During the mean follow-up period of 55.5 months, 80 patients (29.2%) received a radical cystectomy with or without neoadjuvant chemotherapy. The bladder preservation rate for this follow-up period was thus 70.8%.


Medical Enterprises

Monday 18 January 2021

Microwave-Induced Hyperthermia in combination with Chemotherapy: A retrospective analysis from Harlaching Hospital (2009-2015) Germany

We wish to congratulate Dr. Miriam Heibeler - with Head of department Prof. Dr. Oliver Reich at Klinikums Harlaching Lehrkrankenhaus der Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München for her comprehensive thesis work on Synergo® published in 2020. We are extremely proud to share data from her study (translated from German). Full text: https://edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de/25860/1/Hiebeler_Miriam.pdf

The following is a summary translated from Dr. Hiebeler study and with her permission.

The intended information is for professionals only.



Microwave-Induced Hyperthermia in combination 

with Chemotherapy: 

A retrospective analysis from Harlaching Hospital (2009-2015) 

Munich, Germany

Dr. Miriam Hiebeler



A total of 44 non-muscle invasive bladder cancer patients were treated with Synergo® in München Harlaching Hospital Munich between 2009-2015. 41% of the patients were treated according to the prophylactic (adjuvant) protocol and 59% treated according to Synergo® ablative (neo-adjuvant) protocol.

Synergo prophylactic (adjuvant):

18/44 (41%) intermediate and high-risk patients, of which 50% had history of recurring disease with an average of 2.3 incidences prior to Synergo therapy.

Results: At the end of Synergo® treatment cycle, all patients but 2 (11%), who were lost to follow-up, were tumor-free. 
14 of the 16 patients were tumor-free after completion of the Synergo therapy. This corresponds to 87.5% of the patients. The 2 patients who had a recurrence (mean time 2.3 years) both had pTaG1 tumor prior to Synergo which presented itself also when recurrence was recorded. 
The follow-up period for this cohort lasted an average of 3.2 years. 
No cystectomy had to be performed during that period. 




Synergo ablative (neo-adjuvant):

26/44 (59%) of the patients were treated. 90% were classified as high-risk (according to the EAU guidelines), with TaG3, T1G2, T1G3 and/or CIS. 73% of the patients thad history of recurring disease. 

An analysis of two groups who received Synergo ablative was performed. One group (62%) treated according to the protocol and the other (38%) was given Synergo as a therapy attempt although patients had contraindications prior to treatment (e.g. history of other tumours or urothelial carcinoma of the upper urinary tract). 

The Kaplan-Meier curve of all patients treated according to the ablative protocol shows 83% disease-free at one year and 70% at disease-free 5 years.



Below are the two ablative cohorts analysed separately:

Results of ablative Synergo:

16 patients were treated according to the Synergo recommended protocol. 15/16 of the patients were classified high-risk (according to EAU), one patient was classified as intermediate-risk. 73% of the patients had a history of disease and several were highly recurrent (3 or more episodes in the previous two years). 6 patients were “first episode” who had been diagnosed with T1 or high-grade carcinoma. Five of the latter had concomitant carcinoma in situ (CIS).

Of the 16 patients treated, 15 (93.8%) patients showed a complete response rate (tumor-free urinary bladder biopsies at the end of the ablation series). The average time to complete response was 1.9 months.

In one patient, the ablation therapy had no effect and a progression from TaG3 to pT2aG2 was recorded. This patient was cystectomised. Patients with complete response continued treatment and follow-up. The mean follow-up time was 24.2 months.

13/15 (86.7%) of the patients remained disease free for an average of 26 months and showed no further tumor formation during this period. Two patients (13.3%) had tumor recurrence. They were ultimately cystectomised after a follow-up period of 24.2 months.

In total, four of the 16 patients had to have their bladder removed. Two patients suffered tumor recurrence, one patient showed tumor progression and a cystectomy was performed on another patient with a reduced bladder capacity of less than 90 ml. The resected bladder, however, was completely tumor-free. One patient was partially resected because of a suspected tumor recurrence. The resected material was tumor-free. In the subsequent examinations, no new tumor was detected in the rest of the urinary bladder.



Results of ablative Synergo in patients with known exclusion criteria for Synergo 10/26):

One patient stopped therapy prematurely due to severe allergic skin reactions. His therapy results were not taken into account.

7/9 (77.8%) showed no tumor recurrence or progression after a follow-up period of an average of 33.4 months.

Two patients (22.2%) experienced recurrence in the form of muscle-invasive carcinoma. One developed pT2G3 carcinoma from TaG3 stage, the other developed invasive pT3aG3 carcinoma from T1G3 tumor. This patient (11.1%) underwent a cystectomy ten months after start of Synergo therapy.

A total of three patients (33.3%) died as a result of bladder carcinoma. In two patients the urinary bladder was tumor-free at the time of death; they died from extensive metastasis. The average time to death was 14.3 Months.



Side effects to therapy:

Side effects noted in a total of 63% of the prophylactic treated patients and in 69% of the ablative treated patients.
The most common were pain in the form of bladder cramps during treatments, dysuria, nocturia and allergy. Severe complications in the form of urethral strictures occurred in 27.8% of the patients, although there was no stricture impeding a cystoscope to pass. The most noted side effect observed in almost all patients during cystoscopy was posterior thermal wall reaction (average grade 2 in both groups). The posterior thermal wall reaction is symptom-free and disappears after a few months. Below are the detailed tables of side effects recorded in both prophylactic and ablative Synergo treatments.




Medical Disclaimer

While clinical studies support the safety and effectiveness of the Synergo® RF thermo-chemotherapy system when used in the treatment of non-muscle invasive bladder cancer, results may vary. There are no guarantees of outcome. Before you decide on treatment options, discuss them with your doctor. Understanding the risks of each treatment can help you make the best decision for your individual situation. Synergo treatment may not be appropriate for every individual; it may not be applicable to your condition. Always ask your doctor about all treatment options, as well as their risks and benefits. Only your doctor can determine whether Synergo is appropriate for your situation. 






Monday 26 October 2020

Synergo for High-risk NMIBC

Urology Cancer specialists,

We are proud and honoured to share an article published in October 2020, by Denosshan Sri et al. St Georges Urology Centre (London) on Urologic Oncology. 

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.urolonc.2020.09.016

Cystectomy outcomes in patients who have failed Radiofrequency-induced Thermo-chemotherapeutic Effect Mitomycin-C (RITE-MMC) treatment for high-risk non-muscle invasive bladder cancer (HRNMIBC) -Does it complicate surgery and adversely impact oncological outcome?

Denosshan SriHack Jae LeeSarah El-GemmalChris BackhouseAndrea TayBabbin JohnMatthew J PerryBenjamin E AyresRami Issa St. George's Hospital, London, UK

Highlights for Review

Radiofrequency-Induced Thermo-chemotherapeutic Effect Mitomycin (RITE-MMC) can be an alternative in BCG failure.

RITE-MMC treatment does not result in a technically more challenging cystectomy.

RITE-MMC treatment does not compromise oncological outcome compared to those patients undergoing cystectomy immediately post BCG failure.

The article presents a retrospective study of a prospective cystectomy database. Inclusion criteria were HRNMIBC with BCG failure undergoing cystectomy.

Thirty-six patients who received RITE-MMC underwent cystectomy, compared to 102 that did not. Median ages were comparable at 72 and 69 years, respectively. Patients were followed up for a median of 24 months across the 2 groups. The commonest histological stage in both groups was CIS. There were no significant differences in intraoperative blood loss, length of stay and 90-day readmission between the 2 groups. There were proportionally fewer recurrences in the RITE-MMC group (16% vs. 19%) and median time to recurrence was longer in the RITE-MMC group (37 months vs. 24 months). Multivariate analysis did not reveal a significant correlation between pre-op RITE-MMC and post-operative readmission (P = 0.606). Survival curves show no significant difference in time to recurrence across both groups (P = 0.513), and no overall (P = 0.069) or cancer specific mortality (P = 0.129) dis-advantage was noted in the RITE-MMC group.

Conclusion
We have found that RITE-MMC treatment does not result in a technically more challenging cystectomy and does not compromise oncological outcome compared to those patients undergoing cystectomy immediately post-BCG failure. We feel RITE-MMC remains a useful tool in a carefully selected group of patients who may not be willing to accept the morbidity of a cystectomy at the time, without significantly compromising their long-term outcome.


 

Medical Enterprises’s commentary:

St Georges University Hospital Urological centre is one of the leading Referral Centres of Synergo worldwide and its dedicated team accumulated a vast experience over the past 16 years with Synergo Radiofrequency-Induced ThermoChemotherapy (RITE).

One may note that, as such, the referrals to the hospital for cystectomy constitutes a very high number, and seeing the relatively few cystectomies carried out on patients whom previously received radiofrequency treatment in the bladder prompts hope for many patients who opt to preserve their bladders despite the indication for a radical surgery.

This researcher’s group has presented their bladder preservation study in over 10 years follow-up (Link to the study), and this new article sheds light on the possibility of administering RITE as a last step before radical cystectomy (as recurrence and progression rates are oncologically similar), while in the relatively low percentage of patients who would fail this modality over time, a surgery would not impose a greater risk of complications than in an early cystectomy.

Tuesday 15 September 2020

A history note: 1995 post R&D

25 years ago!

Synergo at the very outset. The year is 1995. A group of urologists and scientists at HSR publishes its first article and presents a new device based on a microwave source delivering local bladder hyperthermia together with intravesical chemotherapy.



44 patients treated. Overall response rate in 90.8%: 70.4% complete and 20.4% partial.




Positive, repetitive results have led to the development of the “Synergo®”.

Synergo® RITE technology was specifically developed and designed to deliver local microwave hyperthermia (radiofrequency) in combination with chemo to treat Non Muscle invasive Bladder Cancer. All administered via Synergo transurethral RF applicator.

Starting as early as 1992 and continuously to date clinical trials have been conducted to study the benefits of combined treatment of Synergo® over chemotherapy and immunotherapy alone for people who suffer from NMIBC and other tumors in the bladder. The treatment has become a common practice in leading centres both as a prophylactic treatment (after TUR) and ablative treatment (for tumour eradication).

Photo below: pre-Synergo: transurethral microwave bladder with chemo instillation. A lamp was used to hold the embedded antenna within the silicone catheter.


Photo: 25 years ago! Synergo at the very outset. A designed device. Arm replaces the lamp. 




Monday 27 July 2020

Radiofrequency impairs viability of bladder cancer cells and has an additive effect when combined with chemotherapeutics in vitro

Presented by I.S.G. Brummelhuis et al. ESUR, Porto

A study comparing the effects of two techniques combined with chemotherapy on cell viability of bladder cancer cells in vitro.

 

MMC and epirubicin showed the greatest impact on the cell viability of all cell lines. RF-induced HT inhibited cell viability of T24, J82 and RT4 cancer cell lines. In combination with MMC and epirubicin this effect was additive. The majority of the effects of RF-induced HT were not attributable to the effect of HT, implying that the effect of RF adds independently to the effects of HT and chemotherapy. The cell viability of benign hbSMC was not affected by RF. 


European Urology Supplements 18(8):e3152-e3153 · October 2019
 

Wednesday 12 September 2018

Synergo presented at the SWDGU (Südwestdeutsche Gesellschaft für Urologie e.V.), Offenburg 2018


45-year-old patient suffering from a multifocal, recurrent non-muscle invasive transitional cell carcinoma of the urinary bladder since 2012.The patient had multiple transurethral resections of the bladder (max. Tumor Stage pTA, high-grade).

The patient received instillations therapy with Mitomycin (8x), 2013 followed BCG instillations, which was aborted due to BCGitis with pulmonary and hepatic infection.
In 2015, following repeated recurrences of tumors, the patient was recommended cystectomy which the patient rejected.
Synergo® treatment was performed at the patient's request. A total of 8 induction cycles (11/2015 -01/2016, 2x40 mg Mitomycin weekly) and 6 maintenance cycles (04 – 12/2016, 2x20 mg Mitomycin 6-weekly) were given.

Since 03/17 the patient receives a maintenance therapy (2x20 mg Mitomycin, once every 3 months) and has been remaining free of tumour for 2 years.
With overall good therapy compatibility, a unique Intradetrusorale Botox injection was required to treat the increasingly pronounced urge symptoms.

RF-Induced hyperthermia and chemotherapy after failure of previous instillation therapies with Mitomycin and BCG can be an effective therapy option in individual cases before offering cystectomy.

Hyperthermiegestützte Mitomycininstillation nach Versagen der herkömmlichen Instillationstherapien bei rezidivierendem, nicht muskelinvasivem Harnblasenkarzinom als Alternative zur Zystektomie 

Presentation given by Maxim KocherginUlrich Witzsch; Joseph Bcheraoui; Stefan Tietz; Eduard Walter Becht from Krankenhaus Nordwest

Saturday 25 August 2018

"Knowledge of drug diffusion mechanisms into the tissue and cellular cytoplasm following bladder
instillation is a key to understand the safety profile and clinical activity of chemotherapy."

Intravesical Chemotherapy and Chemohypherthermia in Non-Muscle-Invasive Bladder
Cancer; An Overview on Drug Administration Technologies and Pharmacokinetics
Campodonico F, Di Stasi S, Lev GM, Terrone C, Bongiovanni L, Mattioli F, Pagliarulo V and Introini C
Current Drug Metabolism, 2017

https://doi.org/10.2174/1389200218666170427092421

Despite the widely adopted international guidelines’ recommendations, and recent clinical trials of device-assisted chemotherapy instillations showing markedly enhanced recurrence-free survival compared even to the standard of care, clinicians and pharmacologists are not familiar with the in-depth physical aspects, pharmacokinetics and systemic absorption of chemotherapeutic drugs following their intravesical
administration. This paper gives a comprehensive review covering various aspects of different treatments with intravesical drugs.
Device-assisted therapies have set a goal to potentiate the drug’s effect and efficacy. The Radiofrequency-Induced Thermochemotherapeutic Effect (RITE) and the Electromotive-Drug Administration (EMDA) are the two most relevant modalities used to increase the activity of intravesical chemotherapy.

This new published study examined whether RF-CHT (using Synergo system) results in higher MMC drug tissue concentrations as compared to cold MMC instillation.

Intravesical radiofrequency induced hyperthermia enhances mitomycin C accumulation in tumour tissue,
F. Johannes P. van Valenberg, Antoine G. van der Heijden, Rianne J. M. Lammers, Johannes Falke, Tom J. H. Arends, Egbert Oosterwijk & J. Alfred Witjes
International Journal of Hyperthermia


Patients received either (1) cold drug instillation (Mitomycin) or (2) RF-CHT (Synergo) before a planned transurethral resection operation. After instillation, three biopsy tests were taken of both normal and tumour tissue. The results showed that the median drug concentration in tumour tissue was higher in the RF-CHT (Synergo) group (median 665.00ng/g vs. 63.75ng/g, U¼51.0, p¼0.018). Moreover, in both techniques the MMC concentration was lower in normal tissue compared to tumour tissue. They concluded that Intravesical RF-CHT results in higher tumour MMC concentrations vs. cold MMC instillation which contributes to its superior efficacy.



virtual London (EAU 2017)
Enjoyed meeting all urology specialists at the last EAU conference!

Thursday 8 June 2017

Updates from the European Association of Urology Guidelines 2017

Bladder Cancer - Updates from the European Association of Urology Guidelines:

Background:
The Synergo® treatment has become a common practice in leading centers both as a prophylactic treatment (after TUR) and ablative treatment (for tumour eradication). The prophylactic induction phase includes 6 weekly sessions followed by 6 in a maintenance phase, once every 6 weeks. The clinical outcomes of this adjuvant protocol were recently included in the European Association of Urology Guidelines. A multinational randomised controlled trial comparing the efficacy and safety of Synergo® vs. BCG, presents better results in the Synergo® group (Disease free patients: 81.8% vs. 64.8% respectively in 2-yr follow-up). 

With the new recommendations, Synergo®’s level of evidence makes it the only non-experimental device for the treatment of NMIBC.
The following is taken from the EAU 2017 guidelines:

 

7.3.3.Treatment of BCG failure and recurrences after BCG

Treatment recommendations are provided in Sections 7.5 and 7.7. They reflect the categories mentioned in Table 7.2 and tumour characteristics at the time of recurrence.
Patients with BCG failure are unlikely to respond to further BCG therapy; RC is therefore the preferred option. Various studies suggest that repeat BCG therapy is appropriate for non-high-grade and even for some high-grade recurrent tumours [232,233] (LE: 3). Additionally, there are now several bladder preservation strategies available that can be categorised as intravesical immunotherapy [234], intravesical chemotherapy, device-assisted therapy (see Section 7.2.1.3.2), and combination therapy (see Section 7.2.3) [235]. Changing from BCG to these options can yield responses in selected cases with BCG treatment failure [232,234-242] (LE: 3).
Treatments other than RC must be considered oncologically inferior in patients with BCG failure at the present time [150,229,230] (LE: 3).
Little is known about the optimal treatment in patients with high-risk tumours who could not complete BCG instillations because of intolerance.
Non-high-grade recurrence after BCG is not considered as BCG failure. Treatment decision should be individualised according to tumour characteristics. It could include chemotherapy or repeat BCG instillations, but the published evidence is very low.
Synergo® Technology
The Synergo® device delivers radiofrequency local radiation: a synergistic tri-modality of local, non-ionising Radiofrequency, RF, a chemotherapy instillation, and tissue hyperthermia – all in one, powerful combination, for treating intermediate and high risk Non-Muscle Invasive Bladder Cancer. A special catheter, carrying an embedded small radio-frequency (RF 915 MHz) antenna and thermocouples (special temperature measuring sensors), is introduced into the urinary bladder.
The distal end of the catheter is connected to the Synergo® computer-embedded device that enables the physician to monitor and control the system activity in real-time.
The antenna controllably radiates the bladder walls, while the thermocouples monitor the bladder wall temperature to help ensure that it is kept at a safe range. Chemotherapeutic agent is instilled through the same catheter and constantly circulated and cooled by the heat exchanger unit of the Synergo® device.
Selective effects of RF on cancer cells include phenotypical changes, the formation of micropores on their membranes, and the loss of adhesion between malignant cells – an influential parameter of tumour growth. The drug can now easily penetrate into, and in between these cells, reaching deeper hidden locations. Studies reveal that with RF, even the more resistant cancer cells, become susceptible to chemotherapy, whereas, the effects of RF are negligible on healthy cells. Tissue heating, hyperthermia, is a welcomed by-product of RF. It causes changes in blood perfusion and ruptures in blood supply to malignant cells, as well as unfolding and denaturing of proteins, causing irreparable damages to the DNA selectively in cancer cells. Temperatures of approximately 42 degrees Centigrade, 107 Fahrenheit, are monitored and maintained throughout the treatment.
Temperature elevation of the bladder walls to 42±2ºC enhances the effectiveness of chemotherapeutic agents through several mechanisms additional to those identified in-vitro, including improved tissue penetration and altered immunological response.

May 2017 was bladder cancer awareness month!
Bladder cancer is the fifth most common cancer in the Western world and the second most frequent malignancy of the urinary tract after prostate cancer.

Thursday 28 July 2016

Recurrence Free Survival at 1, 2 and 5 years was 89.6%, 79.2 and 68.3 respectively

We were thrilled and excited to come across this newly presented Synergo® data at the last Auro National Congress. Dr. Canepa, Dr. Campodonico and team presented their long term outcomes of treatment in Genova centres, Italy.

TEN YEARS EXPERIENCE WITH INTRAVESICAL THERMO-CHEMOTHERAPY MMC 40MG FOR NON MUSCLE INVASIVE BLADDER CANCER HIGH/INTERMEDIATE RISK

G. Canepa1, F. Campodonico1, S. Tamagno1, C. Introini2, M. Puntoni3
1 E.O. Ospedali Galliera, S.C. Urologia (Genova) 2 Ospedale Evangelico Internazionale, S.C. Urologia (Genova Voltri) 3 E.O. Ospedali Galliera, Direzione Scientifica e Biostatistica (Genova)

Aim of the study: evaluate the long-term experience on a treatment combining intravesical hyperthermia with Mytomicin C (HT-MMC) delivered with the Synergo® device.
More than 1600 treatments performed since 2004
146 Intermediate and High-risk NMIBC patients
37/146 patients reported a recurrence and 14/146 patients presented a progression.
The Recurrence Free Survival at 1, 2 and 5 years was 89.6%, 79.2 and 68.3 respectively.
Progression Free Survival at 1, 2 and 5 years was 98%, 96.2 and 83.7 respectively.
The number of treatment sessions for each patients were 10.4+/- 4.7 with a median of 11 sessions (Range 4-31). The time of exposure over 42°C was 37.4+/-7.4 mins. and the mean temperature was 42.0+/-0.8°C. The safety profile showed mainly grade 1 and 2 side effects. Ten patients complained grade 3 side-effects, including 1 patient bladder spasms/pain during treatment, 3 patients dysuria and 6 patients urgency after treatment.
Presented at: XXIII Congresso Nazionale Auro May 2016