| Literature DB >> 32545572 |
Etienne Garin1, Xavier Palard2, Yan Rolland3.
Abstract
Selective internal radiation therapy (SIRT) of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) has been used for many years, usually without any specific dosimetry endpoint. Despite good clinical results in early phase studies or in cohort studies, three randomized trials in locally advanced HCC available failed to demonstrate any improvement of overall overall survival (OS) in comparison with sorafenib. In recent years, many studies have evaluated the dosimetry of SIRT using either a simulation-based dosimetry (macroaggregated albumin (MAA)-based) or a post-therapy-based one (90Y-based). The goal of this review is to present the dosimetry concept, tools available, its limitations, and main clinical results described for HCC patients treated with 90Y-loaded resin or glass microspheres. With MAA-based dosimetry, the threshold tumor doses allowing for a response were between 100 and 210 Gy for resin microspheres and between 205 and 257 Gy for glass microspheres. The significant impact of the tumor dose on OS was reported with both devices. The correlation between 90Y-based dosimetry and response was also reported. Regarding the safety, preliminary results are available for both products but with a larger range of normal liver doses values correlated with liver toxicities due to numerous confounding factors. Based on those results, international expert group recommendations for personalized dosimetry have been provided for both devices. The clinical impact of personalized dosimetry has been recently confirmed in a multicenter randomized study demonstrating a doubling of the response rate and an OS of 150% while using personalized dosimetry. Even if technical dosimetry improvements are still under investigation, the use of personalized dosimetry has to be generalized for both clinical practice and trial design.Entities:
Keywords: dosimetry; hepatocellular carcinoma; radioembolisation
Year: 2020 PMID: 32545572 PMCID: PMC7353030 DOI: 10.3390/cancers12061557
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1Example of dosimetry parameters for a treatment. A = activity contained in the selected volume (ex: APL = Activity contained in the Perfused Liver); M= Mass of the selected volume; HR = Hepatic Reserve; NPL = Normal Perfused Liver; NPLD = Normal Perfused Liver Dose; PL= Perfused liver; PLD = Perfused Liver Dose; T = Tumor; TD = Tumor Dose; WL = Whole Liver; WLD = Whole Liver Dose; WNL= Whole Normal Liver; WNPLD = Whole Normal Perfused Liver Dose.
Studies with tumor dose outcome correlation in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) with glass micropsheres.
| Author and Year of Publication | Chiesa 2011 [ | Garin 2012 [ | Garin 2017 [ | Ho 2018 [ | Chan 2018 [ | Kappadath 2018 [ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nb of patients/lesions | 48/65 | 36/58 | 85/132 | 62/na | 27/38 | 34/53 |
| Lesion size (cm) | 5.6 | 7.1 | 7.1 | na | 7.3 | 4.1 |
| Macroaggregated albumin (MAA)- or 90Y-based dosimetry | MAA-based | MAA-based | MAA-based | MAA-based | 90Y PET | 90Y SPECT/CT |
| Response evaluation | EASL | EASL | EASL | 18FDG or 11C-acetate PET | mRECIST | mRECIST |
| Tumor dose (TD) parameter (Gy)/threshold TD (TTD) | mean TD | mean TD | mean TD | mean TD | mean TD | mean TD |
| RR for TD ≥ TTD vs. < TTD | 85% vs. na | na | 91% vs. 5.5% | na | 84% vs. na | 50% TCP |
| Prediction of response for TTD | se = 85% | se = 100% | se = 98.3% | se = 89.2% | se = 66% | na |
| OS for TD ≥ vs. < TTD | na | 18m vs. 9m | 21m vs. 6.5m | na | na | na |
Nb = number; na = not available; TTD = threshold tumor dose; w = week, m = months; se = sensitivity; spe = specificity; PPV = negative predictive value; acc = accuracy; TCP = tumor control probability; HCC = hepatocellular carcinoma; RR = response rate.
Studies with tumor dose outcome correlation in HCC with resin micropsheres.
| Author and Year of Publication. | Lau 1994 [ | Hermann 2018 [ | Kao 2012 [ | Strigari 2010 [ | Allimant 2018 [ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nb patients/lesions | 18/na | 121/na | 10/na | 73/na | 37/na |
| Lesion size (cm) | na | na | na | 2.9 | 5 |
| MAA or 90Y | MAA based | MAA based | 90Y SPECT/CT | 90Y SPECT/CT | 90Y PET |
| Response evaluation | WHO | RECIST1.1 | RECIST1.1 | EASL | mRECIST |
| TD parameter (Gy)/threshold TD (TTD) | Mean TD | Mean TD | Mean TD | BED | AUDVHT
|
| RRs for TD ≥ TTD vs. TD < TTD | 87.5% vs. 12% | na | 100% vs. na | TCP of 73% | TCP of 76.5% |
| Prediction of response for TTD | na | na | na | na | se = 76.5% |
| OS for TD ≥ TTD vs. TD < TTD | 55 w vs. 26.6 w | 14.1 m vs. 6.1 m | na | na | na |
Nb = number, na = non available, TTD = threshold tumor dose, w = week, m = months, se = sensitivity; spe = specificity, acc = accuracy, BED = biological effective dose, TCP = tumor control probability, AUDVHT = area under the tumor dose volume histogram; RR = response rate; OS = Overall Survival.
Figure 2Example of a patient treated with the standard dosimetry approach, with a lesion under-treated (tumor dose below the 205 Gy threshold) (A) Baseline CT image of bilobar HCC with a 10.7 cm lesion of the left lobe and a 5.2 cm lesion of segment V in a 70-year-old patient with good performance status (ECOG 0) and liver functions (Child Pugh A5). The patients received a treatment of the left lobe with 1.93 GBq of 90Y glass microspheres using the standard dosimetry approach delivering 140 Gy to the large lesion and 117 to the left lobe. On the CT image, 3 months after SIRT, stable disease was observed (B). Overall survival of this patient was 8.7 months.
Figure 3Example of a patient treated with a personalised dosimetry approach, with a lesion accurately treated (tumor dose higher than the 205 Gy threshold). (A) Based CT image of 15 cm unifocal right HCC with the invasion of the veina cava in a 64-year-old patient with good performance status (ECOG 0) and liver functions (Child Pugh A5). The patient received a treatment of the right lobe with 7.06 GBq of 90Y glass microspheres using the personalized dosimetry approach delivering 294 Gy to the large lesion and 173 Gy to the right lobe. CT image, 3 months after SIRT, partial response of the huge lesion was obtained using EASL criteria, as no recurrence on the left lobe and no extra hepatic spread (B). The patient was still in good performance status (ECOG 0) and liver functions (Child Pugh A5) and a right hepatectomy was performed with veina cave reconstruction. At last follow-up evaluation, 22 months after SIRT, the patient was still in complete response.
Studies with NLD correlation with liver toxicity in HCC patients using resin and glass microspheres.
| Author and Year of Publication | Strigari 2010 [ | Allimant 2018 [ | Garin 2013 [ | Chiesa 2015 [ | Garin 2017 [ | Chan 2018 [ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nb of patients | 73 | 37 | 71 | 52 | 85 | 35 (27 HCC, |
| Product | resin | resin | glass | glass | glass | glass |
| MAA- or 90Y-Based dosimetry | 90Y SPECT/CT | 90Y PET | MAA based | MAA based | MAA based | 90Y PET |
| Toxicity evaluation | G ≥ 2 | REILD | Clinically relevant, G ≥ 3 and permanent | Any liver decompensation | Clinically relevant, G ≥ 3 and permanent | G ≥ 2 |
| NLD parameter/normal liver threshold dose (NLTD) | NPL BED | AUDVHNPL na | NPLD | WNLD | NPLD | NPLD |
| NTCP for an NLD larger than an NLTD | 50% | na | na | 15% | na | 50% |
| NLD parameters for patients with toxicity and no toxicity | na | 78.9 Gy vs 53.8 Gy | na | na | 104.7 Gy vs 79.5 Gy | na |
Nb = number, na = not available, NLD = normal liver dose, NTCP = nontumor complication probability, BED = biologically effective dose, AUDVHNPL = area under the normal perfused liver dose volume histogram, NPL = normal perfused liver, NPLD = normal perfused liver dose, HR = hepatic reserve, WNLD = whole normal liver dose.