Oliver Micke1, M Heinrich Seegenschmiedt. 1. Department of Radiotherapy, Münster University Hospital, Albert-Schweitzer-Strasse 33, 48129 Münster, Germany. omicke@benign-news.de
Abstract
PURPOSE: After a general Patterns of Care Study (PCS) the German Cooperative Group on Radiotherapy for Benign Diseases (GCG-BD) initiated a multicenter cohort study to analyze the radiation therapy practice for aggressive fibromatosis. METHODS AND MATERIALS: In 2002 a PCS was conducted in all German radiotherapy (RT) institutions by mailing a standardized structured questionnaire, to assess patients accrual, number, pretreatment, treatment indications, RT, and target volume concepts for irradiation in aggressive fibromatosis. In addition, the treatment outcome of individual patients was evaluated. The PCS was structured and analyzed according to the model for quality assessment by Donabedian in three major components: structure, process, and outcome evaluation. RESULTS: A total of 101 institutions returned the questionnaire: 52.7% reported satisfactory clinical data and experience for inclusion in this analysis. A total accrual rate of 278 patients per year was reported with median number of 2 cases (1-7 cases) per institution. Satisfactory data for a long-term clinical evaluation was reported for 345 patients from 19 different institutions. The applied total doses ranged between 36 and 65 Gy (median, 60 Gy). The local control rate was 81.4% in primary RT for unresectable tumors and 79.6% in postoperative RT. No acute or late radiation toxicities > Grade 2 (RTOG) were observed. No clear dose-response relationship could be established, but there was a tendency toward a lower local control rate in patients with a higher number of operative procedures before RT and patients treated for recurrent aggressive fibromatosis. CONCLUSIONS: This study comprises the largest database of cases reported for RT in aggressive fibromatosis. Radiotherapy provides a high local control rate in the postoperative setting and in unresectable tumors. This PCS may serve as a starting point for a national or international prospective multicenter study or registry, or both.
PURPOSE: After a general Patterns of Care Study (PCS) the German Cooperative Group on Radiotherapy for Benign Diseases (GCG-BD) initiated a multicenter cohort study to analyze the radiation therapy practice for aggressive fibromatosis. METHODS AND MATERIALS: In 2002 a PCS was conducted in all German radiotherapy (RT) institutions by mailing a standardized structured questionnaire, to assess patients accrual, number, pretreatment, treatment indications, RT, and target volume concepts for irradiation in aggressive fibromatosis. In addition, the treatment outcome of individual patients was evaluated. The PCS was structured and analyzed according to the model for quality assessment by Donabedian in three major components: structure, process, and outcome evaluation. RESULTS: A total of 101 institutions returned the questionnaire: 52.7% reported satisfactory clinical data and experience for inclusion in this analysis. A total accrual rate of 278 patients per year was reported with median number of 2 cases (1-7 cases) per institution. Satisfactory data for a long-term clinical evaluation was reported for 345 patients from 19 different institutions. The applied total doses ranged between 36 and 65 Gy (median, 60 Gy). The local control rate was 81.4% in primary RT for unresectable tumors and 79.6% in postoperative RT. No acute or late radiation toxicities > Grade 2 (RTOG) were observed. No clear dose-response relationship could be established, but there was a tendency toward a lower local control rate in patients with a higher number of operative procedures before RT and patients treated for recurrent aggressive fibromatosis. CONCLUSIONS: This study comprises the largest database of cases reported for RT in aggressive fibromatosis. Radiotherapy provides a high local control rate in the postoperative setting and in unresectable tumors. This PCS may serve as a starting point for a national or international prospective multicenter study or registry, or both.
Authors: A Montero Luis; R Hernanz de Lucas; A Hervás Morón; E Fernández Lizarbe; S Sancho García; C Vallejo Ocaña; A Polo Rubio; A Ramos Aguerri Journal: Clin Transl Oncol Date: 2008-06 Impact factor: 3.405
Authors: M Heinrich Seegenschmiedt; Oliver Micke; Marcus Niewald; Ralph Mücke; Hans Theodor Eich; Jan Kriz; Reinhard Heyd Journal: Strahlenther Onkol Date: 2015-03-10 Impact factor: 3.621
Authors: Bella Pajares; Esperanza Torres; Begoña Jiménez; Isabel Sevilla; Ana Rodríguez; José Manuel Rico; José Manuel Trigo; Emilio Alba Journal: Clin Transl Oncol Date: 2011-03 Impact factor: 3.405
Authors: Ralph Mücke; M Heinrich Seegenschmiedt; Reinhard Heyd; Ulrich Schäfer; Franz-Josef Prott; Michael Glatzel; Oliver Micke Journal: Strahlenther Onkol Date: 2009-12-28 Impact factor: 3.621