| Literature DB >> 29903551 |
Srinivas Raman1, Jean-Pierre Bissonnette1, Andrew Warner2, Lisa Le3, Scott Bratman1, Natasha Leighl4, Andrea Bezjak1, David Palma2, Devin Schellenberg5, Alexander Sun6.
Abstract
We explain the rationale for metabolically adaptive radiation dose escalation in stage III non-small-cell lung cancer and describe the design of a Canadian phase II randomized trial investigating this approach. In the trial, patients are randomized to either conventional chemoradiation treatment (60 Gy in 30 fractions) or metabolically adaptive chemoradiation, where fluorodeoxyglucose-avid tumor sub-volumes receive an integrated boost dose to a maximum of 85 Gy in 30 fractions. The trial sample size is 78 patients, and the target population is patients with newly diagnosed, inoperable stage III non-small-cell lung cancer treated with radical intent chemoradiation. The primary objective of the trial is to determine if dose escalation to metabolically active sub-volumes will reduce 2-year local-regional failure rate from 42.3% to 22.3%, when compared with standard treatment. The secondary objectives are to determine the effect of dose escalation on overall survival, progression-free survival, quality of life, and rate of grade 3 to 5 toxicities.Entities:
Keywords: Adaptive radiotherapy; LA-NSCLC; Positron emission tomography; Prospective randomized trial; Radiotherapy dose escalation
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29903551 DOI: 10.1016/j.cllc.2018.05.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Lung Cancer ISSN: 1525-7304 Impact factor: 4.785