| Literature DB >> 32372571 |
Narek Shaverdian1, Maria Thor2, Annemarie F Shepherd1, Michael D Offin3, Andrew Jackson2, Abraham J Wu1, Daphna Y Gelblum1, Ellen D Yorke2, Charles B Simone1, Jamie E Chaft3, Matthew D Hellmann3, Daniel R Gomez1, Andreas Rimner1, Joseph O Deasy2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Durvalumab after concurrent chemoradiation (cCRT) is now standard of care for unresected stage III non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). However, there is limited data on radiation pneumonitis (RP) with this regimen. Therefore, we assessed RP and evaluated previously validated toxicity models in predicting for RP in patients treated with cCRT and durvalumab.Entities:
Keywords: durvalumab; non-small cell lung cancer; radiation pneumonitis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32372571 PMCID: PMC7333832 DOI: 10.1002/cam4.3113
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Med ISSN: 2045-7634 Impact factor: 4.452
Baseline characteristics
| Patients (n = 62) | |
|---|---|
| Gender | |
| Female | 42% (n = 26) |
| Male | 58% (n = 36) |
| Age (y) | |
| Range | 49‐86 |
| Median | 66 |
| Performance status | |
| ECOG 0 | 53% (n = 33) |
| ECOG 1 | 47% (n = 29) |
| Smoking history | |
| Yes | 97% (n = 60) |
| Smoking during radiation | |
| Yes | 10% (n = 6) |
| Diabetes mellitus II | |
| Yes | 26% (n = 16) |
| Pulmonary disease | |
| COPD | 26% (n = 16) |
| Asthma | 5% (n = 3) |
| Stage | |
| IIIA | 27% (n = 17) |
| IIIB | 53% (n = 33) |
| IIIC | 20% (n = 16) |
| PD‐L1 expression | |
| Unavailable | 17% (n = 11) |
| ≥1% | 53% (n = 33) |
| ≥50% | 29% (n = 18) |
Patient characteristics are from time of initiation of radiation therapy.
Chemoradiation treatment characteristics
| Patients (n = 62) | |
|---|---|
| Chemotherapy | |
| Carboplatin/Paclitaxel | 37% (n = 23) |
| Cisplatin/Pemetrexed | 21% (n = 13) |
| Carboplatin/Pemetrexed | 31% (n = 19) |
| Cisplatin/Etoposide | 11% (n = 7) |
| Radiation Prescription Dose (Gy) | |
| Range | 54‐66 |
| Median | 60 |
| Radiation Planning Target Volume (cc) | |
| Range | 90‐1234.4 |
| Median | 579 |
| Lung Volume Receiving ≥ 20Gy | |
| Range | 6.4%‐38.5% |
| Median | 30.1% |
| Mean Lung Dose (Gy) | |
| Range | 7.2‐21.4 |
| Median | 17.1 |
Characterization of radiation pneumonitis
| Patient & treatment characteristics | Clinical presentation | Imaging findings | Pneumonitis treatment course |
|---|---|---|---|
|
59‐y‐old former smoker with stage IIIC NSCLC of RLL completed 60Gy RT concurrent with cisplatin/etoposide followed by initiation of durvalumab 7 wks post‐RT Mean lung dose: 21.3 Gy Lung volume ≥ 20 Gy: 37.1% | Increased dyspnea and new progressive dry cough 2.8 mo after RT end | Patchy ground‐glass changes within RT field | Started on Prednisone 40 mg daily with 8‐wk taper. Durvalumab discontinued. Respiratory symptoms improved within 1 wk. No recurrent symptoms 6 mo poststeroids |
|
80‐y‐old former smoker with stage IIIB NSCLC of RUL completed 60Gy RT concurrent with carboplatin/pemetrexed followed by initiation of durvalumab 3.1 wks post‐RT Mean lung dose: 18.2 Gy Lung volume ≥ 20 Gy: 31.2% | Increased dyspnea 3.6 mo after RT end | Patchy ground‐glass opacities within RT field | Started on Prednisone 30 mg daily tapered over 18 wks. Durvalumab not held. Respiratory symptoms improved to baseline. No recurrent symptoms 3 mo poststeroids |
|
56‐y‐old former smoker with stage IIIA NSCLC of RUL completed 60Gy RT concurrent with cisplatin/etoposide followed by initiation of durvalumab 2.4 wks post‐RT Mean lung dose: 15.6 Gy Lung volume ≥ 20 Gy: 27.3% | Progressive dry cough, dyspnea with low‐grade fever 9.5 mo after RT end | Increased patchy consolidations within RT field | Durvalumab held and short‐course steroids trialed. Symptoms returned once steroids stopped. Then, started on 40 mg daily Prednisone with 8‐wk taper with symptoms resolution. Symptoms returned within 3 mo and Prednisone restarted with improvement in symptoms. Durvalumab discontinued |
|
86‐y old former smoker with stage IIIA NSCLC of LUL completed 60Gy RT concurrent with carboplatin/paclitaxel followed by initiation of durvalumab 7 wks post RT Mean lung dose: 17.5 Gy Lung volume ≥ 20 Gy: 30.1% | Progressive dry cough and persistent dyspnea 3.3 mo after RT end | Increased patchy consolidation within RT field | Started on Prednisone 50 mg taper. Cough improved within 1 wk. Durvalumab held and discontinued. Dyspnea worsened after completion of Prednisone taper. Restarted Prednisone and continues 9 mo post initial presentation with slowly improving dyspnea. |
|
71‐y‐old current smoker with stage IIIA NSCLC of LUL completed 60Gy RT concurrent with carboplatin/paclitaxel followed by initiation of durvalumab 5.6 wks post RT Mean lung dose: 14.4 Gy Lung volume ≥ 20 Gy: 27.6% |
Progressive dry cough and dyspnea 5.9 mo after RT end | Increased ground‐glass opacities within RT field | Durvalumab held and discontinued. Steroids not initially started given DMII, but cough progressed. Started on Prednisone taper with symptoms improvement. No recurrent symptoms and back to near baseline respiratory status 6 mo after initial presentation |
|
74‐y‐old former smoker with stage IIIC NSCLC of RUL completed 66Gy RT concurrent with carboplatin/paclitaxel followed by initiation of durvalumab 3.6 wks post RT Mean lung dose: 16.2 Gy Lung volume ≥ 20 Gy: 22.6% | Progressive dry cough and dyspnea 5.7 mo after RT end | Increased patchy consolidations within RT field | Started on Prednisone 40 mg daily with taper. Durvalumab held and discontinued. Symptoms improved within 1 wk. No recurrent symptoms 3 mo poststeroids |
|
61‐y‐old former smoker with stage IIIB NSCLC of LUL completed 60Gy RT concurrent with carboplatin/paclitaxel followed by initiation of durvalumab 7.8 wks post‐RT Mean lung dose: 10.2 Gy Lung volume ≥ 20 Gy: 14.6% | Progressive new dyspnea 2.4 mo after RT end | Increased ground‐glass opacities within RT field | Prednisone 40 mg daily started with taper. Durvalumab continued during Prednisone. Symptoms improved within 1 wk of steroid initiation. Symptoms returned after completion of Prednisone taper, Prednisone restarted, and tapered over 4 wks. Durvalumab discontinued. No recurrent symptoms 3 mo poststeroids |
|
75‐y‐old former smoker with stage IIIB NSCLC of RUL completed 60Gy RT concurrent with carboplatin/paclitaxel followed by initiation of durvalumab 6.1 wks post‐RT Mean lung dose: 17.9 Gy Lung volume ≥ 20 Gy: 36.7% | Progressive dry cough and dyspnea with minimal exertion 2.76 mo after RT end | New patchy ground‐glass opacities within RT field | Initially hospitalized for cough and dyspnea and discharged on Prednisone 60 mg daily with planned taper. Durvalumab held and discontinued. Dyspnea worsened 4 wks into taper at 20 mg daily. Prednisone increased, and taper extended for 3 mo with symptom improvement, but with persistent dyspnea greater than baseline. Patient passed away because of disease progression. |
|
66‐y‐old former smoker with stage IIIA NSCLC of RUL completed 60Gy RT concurrent with cisplatin/pemetrexed followed by initiation of durvalumab 9 wks post‐RT Mean lung dose: 19.8 Gy Lung volume ≥ 20 Gy: 34.6% | Progressive dry cough, and increased dyspnea 8.9 mo after RT end | New nodular ground‐glass opacities within RT field | Started Prednisone taper with improvement in cough and dyspnea. Durvalumab held and discontinued. Referred to pulmonology for evaluation of residual dyspnea above baseline |
|
61‐year‐old never smoker with stage IIIB NSCLC of RUL completed 60Gy RT concurrent with carboplatin/pemetrexed followed by initiation of durvalumab 8.2 wks post‐RT Mean lung dose: 17.7 Gy Lung volume ≥ 20 Gy: 28.5% | Progressive dry cough, dyspnea with minimal exertion 2.4 mo after RT end | Increase ground‐glass opacities and patchy consolidations within RT field | Durvalumab held. Started on Prednisone 60 mg daily with taper. Symptoms improved in 2 wks and back to baseline respiratory function at end of taper. Symptoms returned within 1 mo after steroids stopped. Prednisone restarted and tapered over 3 mo. Durvalumab discontinued given disease progression. Now follows with pulmonology, no worsening pulmonary symptoms 6 mo poststeroids |
|
72‐y old former smoker with stage IIIC NSCLC of LUL completed 60Gy RT concurrent with carboplatin/pemetrexed followed by initiation of durvalumab 5.9 wks post RT Mean lung dose: 17.7 Gy Lung volume ≥ 20 Gy: 28.5% | Increased cough and dyspnea 5.9 mo after RT end | Increased ground‐glass opacities within RT field | Durvalumab held and discontinued. Started on Prednisone taper, then hospitalized for pneumonia and treated with methylprednisolone, and discharged with Prednisone taper. No recurrent symptoms 6 mo poststeroids |
Figure 1Time to ≥ grade 2 radiation pneumonitis (RP2) in the concurrent chemoradiation alone cohort (cCRT, grey circles) and in the concurrent chemoradiation and consolidative durvalumab cohort (cCRT + durvalumab cohort, orange circles) as well as their cohort median time to RP2 (dashed grey and dashed orange lines, respectively).
Figure 2Assessment of the QUANTEC, Appelt, and Thor models in predicting ≥ grade 2 radiation pneumonitis (RP2) in patients treated with concurrent chemoradiation alone cohort (cCRT, grey quintiles) and patients treated with concurrent chemoradiation and consolidative durvalumab (cCRT + durvalumab, orange quintiles).