To compare the effects of biodegradable balloon and hydrogel perirectal spacers versus no spacer on prostate motion during SBRT.
We analyzed 341 SBRT fractions with continuous ultrasound tracking in 70 patients treated for localized prostate cancer. Patients received a balloon spacer (118 fractions), a hydrogel spacer (88 fractions), or no spacer (135 fractions) based on institutional availability and FDA approval timeline. Motion was quantified using Poisson regression analysis of clinically meaningful deviation events (≥2-3 mm for ≥3 seconds), Fast Fourier Transform analysis of dominant oscillatory amplitudes, and 3D motion envelope volumes calculated from covariance-derived ellipsoids.
At the 3 mm threshold, balloon spacers reduced deviation events by 53% (incidence rate ratio 0.47; 95% CI, 0.31-0.69; P < 0.001) and hydrogel spacers by 28% (IRR 0.72; 95% CI, 0.55-0.93; P = 0.013) compared to no spacer. Balloon spacers demonstrated significantly smaller dominant oscillatory amplitudes across all spatial dimensions: anteroposterior (0.50 vs 0.73 mm, P = 0.005), superior-inferior (0.30 vs 0.46 mm, P = 0.005), and left-right (0.20 vs 0.27 mm, P = 0.064) versus no spacer. The 3D motion envelope volume was substantially reduced with balloon spacers (0.58 mm³) compared to no spacer (2.04 mm³, P = 0.002) or hydrogel (2.79 mm³, P < 0.001).
In this retrospective SBRT cohort, rectal spacing, particularly with a biodegradable balloon, was associated with less intrafraction prostate motion. These findings suggest a potential motion-stabilizing effect of spacer design.
Practical radiation oncology. 2026 May 15 [Epub ahead of print]
Benjamin V Tward, Martin Szegedi, Jonathan D Tward
University of Michigan, Department of Statistics. Electronic address: ., University of Utah Department of Radiation Oncology., University of Utah Department of Radiation Oncology. Electronic address: .