| Literature DB >> 33293671 |
Abstract
When treating patients with unresectable stage III non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC), those with a good performance status and disease measured within a radical treatment volume should be considered for definitive concurrent chemoradiotherapy (cCRT). This guidance is based on key scientific rationale from two large Phase 3 randomised studies and meta-analyses demonstrating the superiority of cCRT over sequential (sCRT). However, the efficacy of cCRT comes at the cost of increased acute toxicity versus sequential treatment. Currently, there are several documented approaches that are addressing this drawback, which this paper outlines. At the point of diagnosis, a multidisciplinary team (MDT) approach can enable accurate assessment of patients, to determine the optimal treatment strategy to minimise risks. In addition, reviewing the Advisory Committee on Radiation Oncology Practice (ACROP) guidelines can provide clinical oncologists with additional recommendations for outlining target volume and organ-at-risk delineation for standard clinical scenarios in definitive cCRT (and adjuvant radiotherapy). Furthermore, modern advances in radiotherapy treatment planning software and treatment delivery mean that radiation oncologists can safely treat substantially larger lung tumours with higher radiotherapy doses, with greater accuracy, whilst minimising the radiotherapy dose to the surrounding healthy tissues. The combination of these advances in cCRT may assist in creating comprehensive strategies to allow patients to receive potentially curative benefits from treatments such as immunotherapy, as well as minimising treatment-related risks.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33293671 PMCID: PMC7735212 DOI: 10.1038/s41416-020-01070-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Summary of the UK national guidelines for optimal management of stage III NSCLC patients.
| Topic | RCR guidance statement[ | Evidence level[ | NICE guidance statement[ | Supporting references | Consensus with ESMO guidelines[ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| cCRT versus sCRT or radiotherapy alone | cCRT has been demonstrated in meta-analyses to give superior outcomes when compared with sCRT or radiotherapy alone | 1aa/Ab | There were limited data available on whether continuous radiotherapy with concurrent chemotherapy was more effective than alternating radiotherapy and chemotherapy | [ | cCRT generally gives significantly better OS results than sCRT and radiotherapy protocols in unresectable IIIA and IIIB disease |
| CRT versus surgery | No recommendations provided for stage III | - | Consider CRT for patients with stage II or III NSCLC who are not suitable or decline surgery. Balance potential benefit in survival with the risk of additional toxicities. For people with operable stage IIIA–N2 NSCLC who can have surgery and are well enough for multimodality therapy, consider chemoradiotherapy with surgery | [ | cCRT is the treatment of choice in patients evaluated as unresectable in stage IIIA and IIIB |
| Elderly patients | Elderly patients with good performance status (0–1) and few comorbidities derive equal benefit from concurrent therapies as their younger counterparts | 1ba | No recommendations provided | [ | Age itself has not been shown to influence outcome following definitive cCRT. However, data are limited for the elderly population and, in particular, in patients above 75 years of age |
| Neoadjuvant or adjuvant chemotherapy | There is no evidence of benefit for chemotherapy delivered either neoadjuvantly or adjuvantly to those receiving cCRT | 1ba | No recommendations provided for stage III | [ | In the stage III disease CRT strategy, there is no evidence for further induction or consolidation chemotherapy |
| Dose fractionation of concurrent radiotherapy | 55 Gy in 20 fractions over 4 weeks with cisplatin and vinorelbine, 60 Gy in 30 fractions over 6 weeks with cisplatin and etoposide and 66 Gy in 33 fractions over 6.5 weeks with cisplatin and etoposide | Ab | If conventionally fractionated radical radiotherapy is used, offer either 55 Gy in 20 fractions over 4 weeks or 60–66 Gy in 30–33 fractions over 6–6½ weeks. Accelerated radiotherapy fractionation schedules seem to improve outcomes in NSCLC | [ | Promising outcome is achieved with accelerated radiotherapy. A potential radiation schedule could be the delivery of 66 Gy in 24 fractions |
| cCRT toxicity | Concurrent schedules have a higher incidence of grade ≥3 oesophageal toxicities | 1ba | No recommendations provided | [ | No recommendations provided |
(c)(s)CRT (concurrent)(sequential) chemoradiotherapy, Gy grey, NSCLC non-small-cell lung cancer, OS overall survival.
aThe Oxford Centre for evidence-based medicine levels of evidence.[84]
bGuidelines on the radical management of patients with lung cancer.[4]
This table was created by the author, using guidance from refs. [4,5,7,10,15,17,24–26,28,80–84].
(c)(s)CRT, (concurrent)(sequential) chemoradiotherapy; Gy, grey; NSCLC, non-small-cell lung cancer; OS, overall survival.
Stratification of the tumour microenvironment, based on the presence or absence of tumour-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) and PD-L1 expression.
| TILs present | TILs absent | |
|---|---|---|
| PD-L1 positive | Type 1—adaptive immune resistance present | Type 3—intrinsic induction |
| PD-L1 negative | Type 4—other suppressor pathways in promoting immune tolerance | Type 2—immune ignorance |
This table was created by the author, using guidance from ref. [65]