| Literature DB >> 22852764 |
Mohammed Yahia Almaghrabi1, Stéphane Supiot, Francois Paris, Marc-André Mahé, Emmanuel Rio.
Abstract
Advances in imaging and biological targeting have led to the development of stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) as an alternative treatment of extracranial oligometastases. New radiobiological concepts, such as ceramide-induced endothelial apoptosis after hypofractionated high-dose SBRT, and the identification of patients with oligometastatic disease by microRNA expression may yet lead to further developments. Key factors in SBRT are delivery of a high dose per fraction, proper patient positioning, target localisation, and management of breathing-related motion. Our review addresses the radiation doses and schedules used to treat liver, abdominal lymph node (LN) and adrenal gland oligometastases and treatment outcomes. Reported local control (LC) rates for liver and abdominal LN oligometastases are high (median 2-year actuarial LC: 61 -100% for liver oligometastases; 4-year actuarial LC: 68% in a study of abdominal LN oligometastases). Early toxicity is low-to-moderate; late adverse effects are rare. SBRT of adrenal gland oligometastases shows promising results in the case of isolated lesions. In conclusion, properly conducted SBRT procedures are a safe and effective treatment option for abdominal oligometastases.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22852764 PMCID: PMC3485144 DOI: 10.1186/1748-717X-7-126
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Radiat Oncol ISSN: 1748-717X Impact factor: 3.481
Components of SBRT
| Imaging | General radiography; 3- or 4-Dimensional Computed Tomography (CT); Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI); Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy (MRS); Positron Emission Tomography (PET) with or without image fusion with other techniques |
| Patient immobilisation and positioning | Stereotactic Body Frame™ (Elekta, USA); BodyFix™ (Medical Intelligence, Germany) |
| Image guidance | SonArray™modular ultrasound unit (Zmed, Ashland, USA); ExacTrac™ Ultrasound Localisation (BrainLAB, USA); BAT™ system (Nomos, USA). |
| SBRT-ready machines | Novalis™, BrainLAB, USA; Electa’s Synergy™; Varian’s Triology™; Tomotherapy’sHiArt (Tomotherapy, USA); Cyberknife™ (Accuray, USA), VERO-SBRT™ (Germany). |
Advocated safety margins
| Schefter et al. 2005 [ | SBRT of liver metastases | Minimum distance between GTV and PTV surfaces: |
| | | — 0.5 cm, axial planes |
| | | — 1.0 cm, superior/inferior |
| | | Cumulative maximum tumourdiameter: < 6 cm |
| Katria et al. 2010 [ | IGRT of abdomen and pelvis | Stroom's and Van Herk's margins (cm): |
| | | — 0.39 and 0.35 mm, anterior-posterior |
| | | — 0.94 and 0.46 mm, medial-lateral |
| | | — 0.40 and 1.09 mm, superior-inferior |
| Wysocka et al. 2010 [ | | Median 3.8 mm intrafraction craniocaudal displacement for coeliac axis with smaller displacements for other axes |
| RTOG consensus guidelines [ | Inguinal lymph nodes | Caudad extent of the inguinal region : 2 cm to the saphenous/femoral junction |
| Kim et al. 2011 [ | Inguinal and femoral nodes | 2.2 - 2.9 cm around femoral vessels |
| Van Weieringen et al. 2011 [ | Pelvic lymph nodes | For offline and online correction protocols, respectively: |
| | | — 7 and 5 mm, left-right |
| | | — 6 and 5 mm,craniocaudal |
| — 8 and 7 mm,dorsoventral |
RTOG: Radiation Therapy Oncology Group.
Recommended dose constraints to the liver
| ≤ 30 Gy, 2 Gy/fraction | < 32 Gy, 2-Gy/fraction | < 15 Gy in 3 fractions |
| 21 Gy in 7 fractions | At least 10% of normal liver spared from radiation | < 20 Gy in 6 fractions |
| | | ≥ 700 mL of normal liver receives ≤ 15 Gy |
| 3 to 5 fractions |
SBRT of liver oligometastases
| | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Herfarth et al. 2001 [ | 56 | 14-26 | 6 | 75 | |
| Wulf et al. 2001 [ | 23 | 30 | 9 | 76 | 61 |
| Wulf et al. 2006 [ | 51 | variable dose | 15 | 92 | 66 |
| Hoyer et al. 2006 [ | 97/141*lesions | 45 | 4.3 years | | 79 |
| Méndez-Romero et al. 2006 [ | 34 | 37.5 | 13 | 100 | 86 |
| Kavanagh et al. 2006 [ | 36 | 60 | 19 | 93 (at 18 mos) | |
| Milano et al. 2008 [ | 120/293*lesions | 50 | 41 | | 67 |
| Rusthoven et al. 2009 [ | 63 | 36 - 60 | 16 | 95 | 92 |
| Van der Pool et al. 2010 [ | 31 | 37.5 - 45 | 26 | 100 | 74 |
| Rule et al. 2010 [ | 37 | 30 | 20 | | 56 |
| | | 50 | | | 89 |
| 60 | 100 | ||||
LC: local control.
* Ratio of liver oligometastases to total number of oligometastases.
SBRT of abdominal lymph node oligometastases
| Jereczek-Fossa et al. 2009 [ | 14 | Prostate | 33 (mean) | Mean 18.6 | - No in-field clinical progression |
| | | | | | - Distant or regional LN progression at mean time of 12.7 mo |
| | | | | | - All patients with relapse had high-risk disease |
| Bignardi et al. 2011 [ | 19 | CRC (5/19) | 45 | 12 | Actuarial rate of freedom from local progression: 77.8 ± 13.9 at both 12 and 24 mos |
| | | | | | Minimal acute and chronic toxicity |
| Choi et al. 2010 [ | 30 | Uterus and cervix | EBRT: 27–45 (n = 4 pts) | 15 | 4-year LC rate: 67.4% |
| | | | SBRT: 33–45 | | 4-year OS rate: 50.1% |
| | | | | | (all 30 pts). |
| Kim et al. 2009 [ | 7 | Gastric (salvage aftersurgery) | 48 (median) | 26 | Complete response: n = 5 |
| | | | | | Partial response: n = 2 |
| Kim et al. 2009 [ | 7 | CRC | Escalated dose 36–51 | 26 | Median survival: 37 mos |
| | | | | | 1-year OS: 100% |
| | | | | | 3-year OS: 71.4% |
| | | | | | G4: intestinal obstruction in 1/7 patients |
| Bae et al. 2012 [ | 41 | CRC | 48(45 – 60) | 28 | -PFS, LC and OS rates |
| | | | | | 3-year rates : 40%, 64%, 60% |
| | | | | | 5-year rates : 40, 57%, 38% |
| -G3 perforation after pelvic LN SBRT;G4 obstruction of para-aortic LN SBRT |
EBRT: electron beam radiotherapy; CRC: colorectal cancer; LN: lymph node; LC: local control, OS: overall survival, G: grade.
SBRT of adrenal gland metastases
| Chawla et al., 2009 [ | 30 | 40 Gy (16–50)/4–10 fractions | 9.8 | At 1-year: survival: 44%, LC: 55%, distant control rate, 13% |
| | | | | No late Grade ≥2 toxicity |
| Holy et al., 2011[ | 18 | 20-40 Gy/5 fractions | 21 | In 13 patients with isolated adrenal metastasis: LC :77%, OS:23 months |
| Casamassima et al., 2012 [ | 48 | 36 Gy/3 fractionsa | 16.2 | At 1 and 2 years, LC: 90%; OS: 39.7% and 14.5%, resp. |
| | | | | 1 case of Grade 2 adrenal insufficiency |
| Scorsetti et al., 2012 [ | 34 | 32 Gy/4 fractions | 41 | At 1 and 2 years: LC 66% and 32%, resp. |
| No significant acute and late toxicities |
a70% isodose, 17.14 Gy per fraction at the isocenter. Eight patients were treated with single-fraction (23 Gy) stereotactic radiosurgery.