Literature DB >> 17409839

Conformal high dose external radiation therapy, 80.5 Gy, alone for medically inoperable non-small cell lung cancer: a retrospective analysis.

James J Urbanic1, Andrew T Turrisi, Anand K Sharma, Gerard A Silvestri, Todd E Williams, Kenneth N Vanek, Carol A Sherman.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Retrospective analysis of patients with medically inoperable non-small cell lung cancer treated with continuous high-dose external beam radiation therapy at the Medical University of South Carolina.
METHODS: We identified 35 patients with non-small cell lung cancer treated 1998-2002. None were candidates for resection for reasons including: pulmonary function (n = 23), previous cancer (n = 9), other co-morbidities (n = 2), and refusal of surgery (n = 1). Median percent predicted forced expiratory volume in 1 second was 41.5%. Median age was 71 years. Five patients had more than one primary tumor: three were concurrently treated, two were sequentially treated. Lesion sizes were <3 cm (n = 24); 3-5 cm (n = 12), and >5 cm (n = 5). Nodal stage was as follows: N0 (n = 33) and N1 (n = 2). Radiation therapy was administered once daily: median dose was 80.5 Gy/35 fx/2.3 Gy/fx. The clinical target volume was tumor plus nodes > or =1.0 cm. V20 data were available for 12 patients, with a mean value of 15.7%.
RESULTS: Thirty-four patients completed treatment. Median follow-up was 23.0 months. There were 26 deaths: 19 died from non-small cell lung (73%) and seven died from co-morbid illness (27%). Median survival was 24 months (95% CI, 18.0-31.9 months). Four patients were alive with disease, and five were alive disease-free at 10- and 68-month follow-ups. Of 41 lesions, local failure occurred in 15 lesions (37%) of which 3 local failure patients (9%) failed concomitantly in untreated regional lymph nodes. There were no isolated nodal recurrences. Distant progression: 10 patients (29%) of which 6 distant progression without local failure. Two patients who both had prior lobectomies experienced grade 5 toxicities.
CONCLUSION: Continuous high-dose external beam radiation therapy 80.5 Gy administered in 35 fractions was tolerated. Treatment-related death was rare (6%) and isolated to patients with prior lobectomies in an extremely high-risk population. Most mortality was lung cancer-related. The dose of 80.5 Gy in 7 weeks is supported for patients with single lesions and no prior lobectomy. Local failure dominates and higher effective doses should be explored.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17409839

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Thorac Oncol        ISSN: 1556-0864            Impact factor:   15.609


  2 in total

1.  Clinical results of accelerated hypofractionated radiotherapy for central-type small lung tumours.

Authors:  Y Hatayama; M Aoki; H Kawaguchi; K Hirose; M Sato; H Akimoto; M Tanaka; I Fujioka; K Ichise; S Ono; Y Takai
Journal:  Curr Oncol       Date:  2017-08-31       Impact factor: 3.677

2.  Comparison of accelerated hypofractionation and stereotactic body radiotherapy for Stage 1 and node negative Stage 2 non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC).

Authors:  John T Lucas; Jeffrey G Kuremsky; Mike Soike; William W Hinson; William T Kearns; Carnell J Hampton; A William Blackstock; James Urbanic
Journal:  Lung Cancer       Date:  2014-04-28       Impact factor: 6.081

  2 in total

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