| Literature DB >> 29891263 |
Nuria Rodríguez de Dios1, Felipe Couñago2, José Luis López3, Patricia Calvo4, Mauricio Murcia5, Mikel Rico6, Carmen Vallejo7, Javier Luna8, Itziar Trueba9, Cristina Cigarral10, Nuria Farre11, Rosa Maria Manero12, Xavier Durán13, Pilar Samper14.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Prophylactic cranial irradiation (PCI) is part of the usual treatment in most patients with small-cell lung cancer (SCLC) and response after treatment of the primary tumor. Clinical evidence suggests that radiation dose received by the hippocampus during whole brain radiotherapy might play a role in radiation-induced neurocognitive decline. PATIENTS AND METHODS: This study is a multicenter phase III trial (NCT02397733) randomizing SCLC patients after informed consent, to receive standard PCI treatment or PCI with hippocampus avoidance (PCI-HA) by using intensity modulated radiation therapy or volumetric modulated arc therapy. The primary objective is assessment of hippocampus-dependent memory functioning and safety after PCI with or without hippocampus sparing by the Free and Cued Selective Reminding Test. Secondary objectives are assessment of other neurotoxicity/quality of life, radiological brain abnormalities on magnetic resonance images, and evaluation of the incidence and location of brain metastases after PCI-HA compared with standard PCI. The originally planned sample size (n = 150) has been calculated to detect a 50% difference in the 3-month delayed recall score between the 2 treatment arms, with a statistical power of 80% (β = 20%) and a significance level of 5% (α = 5%), with a maximum loss to follow-up of 10%.Entities:
Keywords: Hippocampal sparing; Hippocampus; Memory function; Neurocognitive function; Prophylactic cranial irradiation
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29891263 DOI: 10.1016/j.cllc.2018.05.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Lung Cancer ISSN: 1525-7304 Impact factor: 4.785