| Literature DB >> 30840594 |
Li Ma1, Yu Men2, Lingling Feng1, Jingjing Kang3, Xin Sun3, Meng Yuan3, Wei Jiang1, Zhouguang Hui2,3.
Abstract
Background The mainstay therapy for locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer is concurrent chemoradiotherapy. Loco-regional recurrence constitutes the predominant failure patterns. Previous studies confirmed the relationship between increased biological equivalent doses and improved overall survival. However, the large randomized phase III study, RTOG 0617, failed to demonstrate the benefit of dose-escalation to 74 Gy compared with 60 Gy by simply increasing fraction numbers. Conclusions Though effective dose-escalation methods have been explored, including altered fractionation, adapting individualized increments for different patients, and adopting new technologies and new equipment such as new radiation therapy, no consensus has been achieved yet.Entities:
Keywords: adaptive radiotherapy; carbon ion radiotherapy; dose escalation; hyperfractionation; hypofractionation; non-small cell lung cancer; proton radiotherapy
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30840594 PMCID: PMC6411023 DOI: 10.2478/raon-2019-0006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Radiol Oncol ISSN: 1318-2099 Impact factor: 2.991
Researches on altered fractionation in NSCLC
| Author | Regimen | No. | Stage | Treatment outcome | p value | RE | p value | RP | p value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Saunders | Conventional radiotherapy: 60Gy/2Gy/30f | 225 | - | 20%(2-year OS) | 0.004 | acute: 7%; late: 5% | - | acute: 19%; late: 4%(symptomatic) | - |
| CHART: 1.5Gy tid, 7 days/week, a total of 54Gy | 339 | 29%(2-year OS) | acute: 9%; late: 7% | - | acute: 10%; late: 16%(symptomatic) | - | |||
| Baumann | conventional radiotherapy: 66Gy/2Gy/33f | 203 | inoperable | 31%(2-year OS) | 0.43 | acute: 2.2%; late;: 0.7%(≥G2) | acute: 0.17; late: 0.62 | acute: 9.5%; late:11%(≥G2 symptomatic) | acute: 0.32; late: 0.59 |
| CHART: 1.5Gy tid, 5 days/week, a total of 54Gy | 203 | 32%(2-year OS) | acute: 5%l late: 1.9%(≥G2) | acute: 6.6%; late:9.2%(≥G2 symptomatic) | |||||
| Mauguen | Conventional radiotherapy | 2000 | - | 15.9%(3-yearOS), 8.3%(5-year OS) | <0.04 | 9% | <0.001 | - | - |
| CHART | 19.7%(3-yearOS), 10.8%(5-year OS) | 19% | |||||||
| Din | 55Gy/2.67Gy/20f | 609 | III | 50%(2-year OS) | - | - | - | 15.1%(G1-2 symptomatic) | - |
| Sun | conventional radiotherapy: 70.8Gy/1.86Gy/38f | 54 | inoperable stage III | 48.1%(RR) | 0.032 | 33.3%(G2) | - | 42.6% (≥G2) | - |
| hypofractionated radiotherapy: 65Gy/2.5Gy/26f | 43 | 69.8%(RR) | 25.6%(G2) | 34.9%(≥G2) | |||||
| Cannon | 57-85.5Gy/2.28-3.42Gy/25f | 79 | LANSCLC | 29%(3-year OS) | - | acute: 48%(G2); late: 28%(G2) | - | 16%(G2)7.6%(G4-5) | - |
| Feddock | A month after standard radiotherapy to 60Gy with concurrent chemotherapy, an SBRT boost was given in ≤5cm residual primary tumors: 10Gy×2f for peripheral lesions, 6.5Gy×3f for central lesions | 61 | II/III | 82.9%(primary tumor control with a median follow-up of 13 months) | - | 1.6%(G2) | - | acute:17.1%; late: 9.4%(≥G2) | - |
| Karam | An SBRT boost with 20-30Gy over 5 fractions was prescribed after conventional CCRT to a median dose of 50.4Gy | 16 | LANSCLC , | 78%(1-yearOS) 76%(1-yearLRC) | - | 18% (G2) | - | 25% (G2) | - |
| Higgins | Standard radiotherapy to 44Gy with concurrent chemotherapy, followed by an SBRT boost in the lung and nodal residuals in four groups: 9Gy×2f, 10Gy×2f, 6Gy×5f and 7Gy×5f | 19 | stageIII(N1/ N2) with ,primary tumors ≤8cm and lymph nodes ≤5cm | 39%(3-yearOS) 59%(3-yearLRC) | - | - | - | - | - |
| Hepel | Standard radiotherapy to 50.4Gy with concurrent chemotherapy, followed by an SBRT boost in the lung and nodal residuals in four groups: 8Gy×2f, 10Gy×2f, 12Gy×2f and 14Gy×2f | 12 | Stage II/III with primary tumor ≤120cc and lymph node volume ≤ 60cc | 78%(1-yearLRC) | - | 0(≥G3) | - | acute: 0(≥G3); late: 8.33%(G5) | - |
f = fraction(s); LANSCLC = locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer; LRC = loco-regional control; OS = overall survival; RE = radiation esophagitis; RP = radiation pneumonitis; SBRT = stereotactic body radiation therapy; tid = three-fractions-per-day
Researches on personalized dose escalation radiotherapy in NSCLC
| Author | Regimen | No. | Stage | Treatment outcome | p value | RE | p value | RP | p value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Van Baardwijk | Initially 1.5Gy bid to 45Gy, then 2Gy per fraction daily increments until reaching the limit dose of normal tissue | 137 | III | 52.4% (2-year OS) | - | acute: 25.5% (G3); late: 4.6% (G3) | - | late: 3% (≥G3) | - |
| Van Elmpt | Initially 2.75Gy to 66Gy,then boost to the entire primary tumor | 15 | I- III | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| Initially 2.75Gy to 66Gy,then boost in the high FDG uptake area | 15 | ||||||||
| Vera | 20 | LANSCLC | 95% (1-year OS) 85% (1-year DFS) | p=0.10 (1-year OS) | acute: 75% (G1-3) | - | acute: 15% (G1-2) late: 5% (G1-2) | - | |
| 24 | 81% (1-year OS) 50% (1-year DFS) | p=0.01 (1-year DFS) | acute: 75% (G1-3) | acute: 12.5% (≥G3) | |||||
| 10 | 50% (1-year DFS) | acute: 100% (G1-5) | acute: 0 | ||||||
| Kong | Initially 50Gy, then adapt target basing on midtreatment PET-CT and escalate dose to the constraints of normal tissue concurrent with chemotherapy | 42 | Inoperable stage I- III | 2-year LRC: 62%; median OS: 25 months | - | 12% (G3) | - | 7% (G3) | - |
CCRT = concurrent chemoradiotherapy; DFS = disease free survival; LANSCLC = locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer; LRC = loco-regional control; RE = radiation esophagitis; RP = radiation pneumonitis; OS = overall survival
Researches on proton and heavy ion radiotherapy in NSCLC
| Author | Regimen | No. | Stage | Treatment outcome | p value | RE | p value | RP | p value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Higgins | Median dose of photon radiotherapy: 59.4Gy | 243474 | I- IV | 13.5% (5-year OS) | 0.01 | - | - | - | - |
| Median dose of PSPT: 60Gy (RBE) | 348 | 23.1% (5-year OS) | |||||||
| Chung | 74Gy (RBE) PSPT concurrent with chemotherapy | 64 | III | 26.5 months (median OS) | - | 8% (G3) | - | 14% (G3-4) | - |
| Liao | IMRT: 66-74Gy | 92 | LANSCLC | 10.9% (LRF) | 0.86 | - | - | 6.5% | 0.40 |
| PSPT: 74Gy (RBE) | 57 | 10.5% (LRF) | 10.5% | ||||||
| Takahashi | 68-76Gy (RBE) carbon ion radiotherapy | 72 | LANSCLC | 93.1% (2-year LRC), 51.9% (2-year OS) | - | 1.4% (G3) | - | 1.4% (G3) | - |
| Karube | 52.8-72Gy (RBE) carbon ion radiotherapy | 64 | II- III | 81.8% (2-year LRC), 62.2% (2 -year OS) | - | 0 (≥G2) | - | 0 (≥G2) | - |
| Shirai | 52.8-70.4Gy (RBE)/4-16f carbon ion radiotherapy | 23 | T2b-4N0M0 | 81% (2-yearLRC), 70% (2-year OS) | - | 0 (≥G3) | - | 0 (≥G3) | - |
CCRT = concurrent chemoradiotherapy; DFS = disease free survival; IMRT = intensity modulated radiation therapy; LANSCLC = locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer; LRC = loco-regional control; OS = overall survival; PSPT = passive scattered proton therapy; RBE = relative biologic equivalent; RE = radiation esophagitis; RP = radiation pneumonitis