| Literature DB >> 26157703 |
Johnny Kao1, Jeffrey Pettit1, Soombal Zahid1, Kenneth D Gold2, Terry Palatt3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The optimal technique for performing lung IMRT remains poorly defined. We hypothesize that improved dose distributions associated with normal tissue-sparing IMRT can allow safe dose escalation resulting in decreased acute and late toxicity.Entities:
Keywords: chemoradiation; dose distribution; intensity-modulated radiation therapy; lung cancer; toxicity
Year: 2015 PMID: 26157703 PMCID: PMC4477157 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2015.00127
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Normal organ constraints used for normal tissue-sparing IMRT lung plans after May 2012.
| Lungs | Esophagus | Spinal cord | Heart | Brachial plexus |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dmean <20 Gy | Mean <34 Gy | Dmax <45 Gy | D60 <33% | Dmax <66 Gy |
| V20 <37% | Dmax <100% Rx (when feasible) | Spinal canal + 5 mm <50 Gy | D45 <66% | |
| V10 <50% | D40 <100% | |||
| V5 <65% |
Patient characteristics for patients treated with standard RT or esophagus and contralateral lung-sparing IMRT.
| Normal tissue-sparing IMRT ( | Standard ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Median | 72 | 67 | 0.63 |
| Range | 30–87 | 48–83 | |
| Male | 25 (56%) | 17 (45%) | 0.28 |
| Female | 19 (44%) | 21 (55%) | |
| Adenocarcinoma | 18 (41%) | 14 (37%) | 0.29 |
| Squamous cell carcinoma | 15 (34%) | 12 (32%) | |
| Small cell carcinoma | 7 (16%) | 10 (26%) | |
| Non-small cell lung cancer, NOS | 4 (9%) | 2 (5%) | |
| Never | 3 (7%) | 1 (3%) | 0.38 |
| 1–20 | 5 (11%) | 13 (34%) | |
| 21–40 | 14 (37%) | 5 (13%) | |
| >40 | 22 (50%) | 18 (47%) | |
| White | 39 (89%) | 29 (76%) | 0.15 |
| Non-white | 5 (11%) | 9 (24%) | |
| II | 7 (16%) | 4 (11%) | 0.64 |
| IIIA | 14 (32%) | 19 (50%) | |
| IIIB | 16 (36%) | 11 (29%) | |
| IV | 7 (16%) | 4 (11%) | |
| No | 37 (84%) | 34 (89%) | 0.48 |
| Yes | 7 (16%) | 4 (11%) | |
| 0–1 | 27 (61%) | 30 (79%) | 0.12 |
| 2 | 12 (27%) | 5 (13%) | |
| 3 | 5 (11%) | 3 (8%) | |
| <10% | 39 (89%) | 34 (89%) | 0.70 |
| >10% | 5 (11%) | 4 (11%) | |
| Right upper | 16 (36%) | 10 (26%) | 0.10 (upper vs. lower) |
| Right middle | 5 (11%) | 3 (8%) | |
| Right lower | 9 (20%) | 3 (8%) | |
| Left upper | 9 (20%) | 16 (42%) | |
| Left lower | 4 (9%) | 5 (13%) | |
| Lymph node only | 1 (2%) | 1 (3%) | |
Treatment characteristics for patients treated with standard RT or esophagus and contralateral lung-sparing IMRT.
| Normal tissue-sparing IMRT ( | Standard ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Median | 66 | 63 | 0.04 |
| <59.4 Gy | 6 (14%) | 9 (24%) | |
| 59.4–63 Gy | 11 (25%) | 16 (32%) | |
| 63.1–66 Gy | 11 (25%) | 5 (13%) | |
| >66.1 Gy | 16 (36%) | 8 (21%) | |
| IMRT only | 33 (75%) | 9 (24%) | <0.001 |
| Combined 3D-CRT + IMRT | 9 (20%) | 8 (21%) | |
| 3D-CRT only | 2 (5%) | 21 (55%) | |
| Median | 4 | 5 | 0.001 |
| Range | 3–7 | 4–9 | |
| Median | 49 | 53 | 0.31 |
| Range | 37–68 | 29–180 | |
| Yes | 36 (82%) | 35 (92%) | 0.07 |
| No | 8 (18%) | 3 (8%) | |
| Yes | 4 (9%) | 2 (5%) | 0.51 |
| No | 40 (91%) | 36 (95%) | |
| 23.3% (SD ± 7.2) | 32.2% (SD ± 11.6) | <0.001 | |
| Range | 7–38% | 10–58% | |
| 33.5% (SD ± 10.0) | 45.7% (SD ± 15.4) | <0.001 | |
| Range | 14–52% | 15–79% | |
| 44.5% (SD ± 13.4) | 61.2% (SD ± 18.9) | <0.001 | |
| Range | 16–80% | 19–99% | |
| 14.0 Gy (SD ± 5.5 Gy) | 17.6 Gy (SD ± 5.6 Gy) | 0.005 | |
| Range | 5.8–39.9 Gy | 5.9–26.2 Gy | |
| 56.5 (SD ± 13.6 Gy) | 61.1 (SD ± 14.0 Gy) | 0.07 | |
| Range | 6–68.3 Gy | 45.8–70.0 Gy | |
| 20.8 Gy (SD ± 10.9 Gy) | 34.0 Gy (SD ± 13.7 Gy) | <0.001 | |
| Range | 0.9–45.3 Gy | 6.8–60.1 Gy | |
| 3.5 (SD ± 5.8 Gy) | 14.5 (SD ± 16.4 Gy) | 0.001 | |
| Range | 0–19.0 Gy | 0–58.0 Gy | |
| 15.2 Gy (SD ± 10.4 Gy) | 18.6 Gy (SD ± 9.8 Gy) | 0.14 | |
| Range | 0.7–39.1 Gy | 0.7–34.3 Gy | |
| 36.2 (SD ± 11.6 Gy) | 42.1 (SD ± 9.3 Gy) | 0.013 | |
| Range | 2.1–46.5 Gy | 4.9–49.5 Gy | |
Figure 1Dose distribution for a representative patient with a 2.5 cm T3N0M0 stage IIB right lower lobe adenocarcinoma treated with standard RT technique. The patient was treated with carboplatin, paclitaxel, and thoracic RT to 63 Gy via six-field IMRT followed by an eight-field IMRT boost. The patient developed acute grade 2 dysphagia and grade 1 dyspnea and died 8 months after treatment from acute myocardial infarction without evidence of progression. (A) Axial dose distribution demonstrates high target volume conformality but inclusion of a significant volume of esophagus within the high dose–volume. A significant volume of lung received at least 5 Gy. (B) Coronal dose distribution. (C) Dose–volume histogram demonstrates high-esophageal V60 and high lung V5, V10, V20, and mean lung doses.
Figure 2Dose distribution for a representative patient with a 6.6 cm T4N2M0 stage IIIB right upper lobe adenocarcinoma treated with contralateral lung and esophageal sparing IMRT technique. The patient was treated with carboplatin, paclitaxel, and thoracic RT to 73 Gy via four-field IMRT. The patient developed acute grade 2 dysphagia, grade 1 dermatitis, and right upper arm deep vein thrombosis. The patient remains alive and free of progression or late toxicity at 21 months. (A) Axial dose distribution demonstrates relatively poor conformality but excellent sparing of the esophagus and contralateral lung. (B) Coronal isodose distribution. (C) Dose–volume histogram demonstrates excellent coverage of the dominant mass (PTV70) and targeted lymph nodes (PTV63) with selective sparing of esophagus and lung.
Figure 3(A) Overall survival for lung cancer patients treated with esophagus and normal lung-sparing IMRT vs. standard technique. (B) Overall survival for patients with stage II–IIIB non-small cell lung cancer receiving definitive chemoradiation treated with esophagus and normal lung-sparing IMRT vs. standard technique.