| Literature DB >> 32884036 |
Najla Slim1, Paolo Passoni2, Elena Incerti3, Roberta Tummineri4, Calogero Gumina1, Giovanni Mauro Cattaneo5, Paola De Nardi6, Carla Canevari3, Claudio Fiorino5, Monica Ronzoni7, Andrea Marco Tamburini6, Valentina Burgio7, Luigi Gianolli3, Nadia Di Muzio1.
Abstract
To assess the role of sentinel lymph-node biopsy (SLNB) and FDG-PET in staging and radiation treatment (RT) of anal cancer patients. This retrospective study was performed on 80 patients (male: 32, female: 48) with a median age of 60 years (39-89 years) with anal squamous cell carcinoma who were treated from March 2008 to March 2018 at the IRCCS San Raffaele Hospital. Patients without clinical evidence of inguinal LNs metastases and/or with discordance between clinical evidence and imaging features were considered for SLNB. FDG-PET was performed in 69/80 patients. Patients with negative imaging in inguinal region and negative SLNB could avoid RT on groin to spare inguinal toxicity. CTV included GTV (primary tumour and positive LNs) and pelvic ± inguinal LNs. PTV1 and PTV2 corresponded to GTV and CTV, respectively, adding 0.5 cm. RT dose was 50.4 Gy/28 fractions to PTV2 and 64.8 Gy/36 fractions to PTV1, delivered with 3DCRT (n = 24) or IMRT (n = 56), concomitant to Mitomycin-C and 5-FU chemotherapy. FDG-PET showed inguinal uptake in 21/69 patients (30%) and was negative in 48/69 patients (70%). Lymphoscintigraphy was performed in 11/21 positive patients (4 patients SLNB confirmed inguinal metastases, 6 patients false positive and 1 patient SLN not found), and in 29/48 negative patients (5/29 showed metastases, 23/29 true negative and 1 SLN not found). Sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive value of FDG-PET were 62%, 79%, 40% and 82%, respectively. Median follow-up time from diagnosis was 40.3 months (range: 4.6-136.4 months): 69 patients (86%) showed a complete response, 10 patients (13%) a partial response, 1 patient (1%) a stable disease. Patients treated on groin (n = 54) versus not treated (n = 26) showed more inguinal dermatitis (G1-G2: 50% vs. 12%; G3-G4: 17% vs. 0%, p < 0.05). For patients treated on groin, G3-G4 inguinal dermatitis, stomatitis and neutropenia were significantly reduced with IMRT against 3DCRT techniques (13% vs. 36%, p = 0.10; 3% vs. 36%, p = 0.003; 8% vs. 29%, p = 0.02, respectively). SLNB improves the FDG-PET inguinal LNs staging in guiding the decision to treat inguinal nodes. IMRT technique significantly reduced G3-G4 toxicities when patients are treated on groin.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32884036 PMCID: PMC7471696 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-71577-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Patient characteristics (n = 80 patients).
| N. patients (%) | 80 (100%) |
|---|---|
| Male | 32 (40%) |
| Female | 48 (60%) |
| Median age (range) | 60 (39–89) |
| Squamous | 80 (100%) |
| Anal canal | 56 (70%) |
| Anal canal + rectal | 12 (15%) |
| Anal canal + margin | 12 (15%) |
| T1 | 14 (18%) |
| T2 | 30 (37%) |
| T3 | 24 (30%) |
| T4* | 12 (15%)* |
| *8: vagina | |
| 1: uterus | |
| 3: prostate | |
| N0 | 29 (36%) |
| N1 | 17 (21%) |
| N2 | 14 (18%) |
| N3 | 20 (25%) |
| M0 | 73 (91%) |
| M1* | 7 (9%)* |
| *3: external iliac | |
| 2: liver (1: liver + bone) | |
| 2: retroperitoneal | |
| Positive | 27 (34%) F: 6 (22%); M: 21 (78%) |
| Negative | 53 (66%) F: 42 (79%); M: 11 (21%) |
(Crude data) Diagnostic accuracy of PET against SLNB evaluation (n = 69 patients).
| PET | Positive inguinal PET: 21/69 (30%) | Negative inguinal PET: 48/69 (70%) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| With SLNB | 40/69 (58%) | 11/21 (52%) | 29/48 (60%) |
| Available SLNB information | 38/69 (55%) (2 not found) | 10/21 (48%) (1 not found) | 28/48 (58%) (1 not found) |
| Positive SLNB | 9/38 (24%) | 4/10 (40%) TP | 5/28 (18%) FN |
| Negative SLNB | 29/38 (76%) | 6/10 (60%) FP | 23/28 (82%) TN |
PET: positron emission tomography; SLBN: sentinel lymph-node biopsy; TP: true positive; TN: true negative; FP: false positive; FN: false negative.
Diagnostic statistics (in bracket the 95% confidence intervals are shown).
| AUC | Sensitivity | Specificity | Positive predictive value | Negative predictive value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.68 (0.46–0.85) | 62% (35%–5%) | 79% (55%–93%) | 40% (19%–85%) | 82% (69%–98%) |
Patient characteristics in “IRT” vs. “NIRT” groups.
| All patients (%) | Inguinal RT “IRT (%) | No inguinal “NIRT” (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Patients | 80 (100) | 54 (68) | 26 (32) |
| Male | 32 (40) | 22 (41) | 10 (38) |
| Female | 48 (60) | 32 (59) | 16 (62) |
| Anal canal | 56 (70) | 37 (68) | 19 (73) |
| Anal canal + rectal | 12 (15) | 8 (15) | 4 (15) |
| Anal canal + margin | 12 (15) | 9 (17) | 3 (12) |
| T1 | 14 (17) | 8 (15) | 6 (23) |
| T2 | 30 (38) | 17 (32) | 13 (50) |
| T3 | 24 (30) | 18 (33) | 6 (23) |
| T4 | 12 (15) | 11 (20) | 1 (4) |
| N0 | 29 (36) | 15 (28) | 14 (54) |
| N1 | 17 (21) | 11 (20) | 6 (23) |
| N2 | 14 (18) | 12 (22) | 2 (8) |
| N3 | 20 (25) | 16 (30) | 4 (15) |
| M0 | 73 (91) | 48 (89) | 25 (96) |
| M1 | 7 (9) | 6 (11) | 1 (4) |
| Positive PET/negative PET | 0/49 | 18/30 | 2/19 |
| Positive SLNB/negative SLBN | 12/34 | 12/13 | 0/21 |
| 3DCRT | 24 (30) | 14 (26%) | 10 (39) |
| Tomotherapy | 18 (23) | 14 (26%) | 4 (15) |
| VMAT | 38 (47) | 26 (48) | 12 (46) |
PET: positron emission tomography; SLBN: sentinel lymph-node biopsy; TP: true positive; TN: true negative; FP: false positive; FN: false negative; VMAT: volumetric modulated arc therapy; IRT: inguinal RT; NIRT: non inguinal RT.
Toxicity evaluation in “IRT” vs “NIRT” groups (n = 80 patients), p < 0.05.
| Toxicity | Inguinal RT “IRT” | No inguinal RT “NIRT” | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| G1–G2 | G3–G4 | G1–G2 | G3–G4 | |
| Perineal dermatitis | 30 (56) | 22 (41) | 12 (46) | 14 (54) |
| Inguinal dermatitis | 27 (50)* (p = 0.001)* | 9 (17)# (p = 0.03)# | 3 (12)* | 0# |
| Diarrhoea | 25 (46) | 3 (6) | 17 (65) | 2 (8) |
| Genito-urinary | 19 (35) | 1 (2) | 13 (50) | 0 |
| Vaginitis | 6/32 (19) | 0 | 5/16 (31) | 0 |
| Nausea/vomiting | 13 (24) | 0 | 3 (12) | 0 |
| Stomatitis | 4 (7) | 2 (4) | 3 (12) | 0 |
| Neutropenia | 10 (19) | 8 (15) | 5 (19) | 5 (19) |
IRT: inguinal RT; NIRT: non inguinal RT.
* Inguinal G1-G2 dermatitis “IRT” vs “NIRT”.
#Inguinal G3–G4 dermatitis “IRT” vs “NIRT”.
RT techniques toxicity evaluation in “IRT” vs. “NIRT” groups (n = 80 patients), p < 0.05.
| Toxicity | 3DCRT: 24/80 | IMRT: 56/80 | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IRT | NIRT | IRT | NIRT | |||||
| G1–G2 | G3–G4 | G1–G2 | G3–G4 | G1–G2 | G3–G4 | G1–G2 | G3–G4 | |
| Perineal dermatitis | 6 (43) | 6 (43) | 4 (40) | 6 (60) | 22 (55) | 16 (40) | 6 (38) | 8 (50) |
| Inguinal dermatitis | (29) | 5 (36)§ (p = 0.10)§ | 1 (10) | 0 | 22 (55) | 5 (13)§ | 1 (6) | 0 |
| Diarrhoea | 11 (79) | 1 (7) | 7 (70) | 2 (20) | 14 (35) | 2 (5) | 10 (63) | 0 |
| Genitourinary | 5 (36) | 0 | 4 (40) | 0 | 13 (33) | 0 | 7 (43) | 0 |
| Vaginitis | 3/9 (33) | 0 | 2/7 (29) | 0 | 3/23 (13) | 0 | 3/9 (33) | 0 |
| Nausea/vomiting | 4 (29) | 0 | 2 (20) | 0 | 9 (23) | 0 | 1 (6) | 0 |
| Stomatitis | 3 (21) | 5 (36)* (p = 0.003)* | 3 (30) | 0 | 1 (3) | 1 (3)* | 0 | 0 |
| Neutropenia | 2 (14) | 4 (29)# (p = 0.02)# | 5 (50) | 1 (10) | 9 (23) | 3 (8)# | 0 | 4 (25) |
IRT: inguinal RT; NIRT: non inguinal RT; IMRT: intensity modulated RT.
§G3–G4 inguinal dermatitis in IRT: 3DCRT vs IMRT.
* G3–G4 stomatitis in IRT: 3DCRT vs IMRT.
#G3–G4 neutropenia in IRT: 3DCRT vs IMRT.