Literature DB >> 33492763

Treatment planning and outcomes effects of reducing the preferred mean esophagus dose for conventionally fractionated non-small cell lung cancer radiotherapy.

Ellen D Yorke1, Maria Thor1, Daphna Y Gelblum2, Daniel R Gomez2, Andreas Rimner2, Narek Shaverdian2, Annemarie F Shepherd2, Charles B Simone2, Abraham Wu2, Dominique McKnight2, Andrew Jackson1.   

Abstract

Based on an analysis of published literature, our department recently lowered the preferred mean esophagus dose (MED) constraint for conventionally fractionated (2 Gy/fraction in approximately 30 fractions) treatment of locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer (LA-NSCLC) with the goal of reducing the incidence of symptomatic acute esophagitis (AE). The goal of the change was to encourage treatment planners to achieve a MED close to 21 Gy while still permitting MED to go up to the previous guideline of 34 Gy in difficult cases. We compared all our suitable LA-NSCLC patients treated with plans from one year before through one year after the constraint change. The primary endpoint for this study was achievability of the new constraint by the planners; the secondary endpoint was reduction in symptomatic AE. Planners were able to achieve the new constraint in statistically significantly more cases during the year following its explicit implementation than in the year before (P = 0.0025). Furthermore, 38% of patients treated after the new constraint developed symptomatic AE during their treatment as opposed to 48% of the patients treated before. This is a clinically desirable endpoint although the observed difference was not statistically significant. A subsequent power calculation suggests that this is due to the relatively small number of patients in the study.
© 2021 The Authors. Journal of Applied Clinical Medical Physics published by Wiley Periodicals, LLC on behalf of American Association of Physicists in Medicine.

Entities:  

Keywords:  dose-volume constraints; non-small cell lung cancer; normal tissue complications probability; treatment planning

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 33492763      PMCID: PMC7882106          DOI: 10.1002/acm2.13150

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Appl Clin Med Phys        ISSN: 1526-9914            Impact factor:   2.102


  5 in total

Review 1.  Meta-analysis of concomitant versus sequential radiochemotherapy in locally advanced non-small-cell lung cancer.

Authors:  Anne Aupérin; Cecile Le Péchoux; Estelle Rolland; Walter J Curran; Kiyoyuki Furuse; Pierre Fournel; Jose Belderbos; Gerald Clamon; Hakki Cuneyt Ulutin; Rebecca Paulus; Takeharu Yamanaka; Marie-Cecile Bozonnat; Apollonia Uitterhoeve; Xiaofei Wang; Lesley Stewart; Rodrigo Arriagada; Sarah Burdett; Jean-Pierre Pignon
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2010-03-29       Impact factor: 44.544

2.  Toward personalized dose-prescription in locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer: Validation of published normal tissue complication probability models.

Authors:  M Thor; Jo Deasy; A Iyer; E Bendau; A Fontanella; A Apte; E Yorke; A Rimner; A Jackson
Journal:  Radiother Oncol       Date:  2019-05-27       Impact factor: 6.280

3.  Modeling the risk of radiation-induced acute esophagitis for combined Washington University and RTOG trial 93-11 lung cancer patients.

Authors:  Ellen X Huang; Jeffrey D Bradley; Issam El Naqa; Andrew J Hope; Patricia E Lindsay; Walter R Bosch; John W Matthews; William T Sause; Mary V Graham; Joseph O Deasy
Journal:  Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys       Date:  2011-06-14       Impact factor: 7.038

4.  Standard-dose versus high-dose conformal radiotherapy with concurrent and consolidation carboplatin plus paclitaxel with or without cetuximab for patients with stage IIIA or IIIB non-small-cell lung cancer (RTOG 0617): a randomised, two-by-two factorial phase 3 study.

Authors:  Jeffrey D Bradley; Rebecca Paulus; Ritsuko Komaki; Gregory Masters; George Blumenschein; Steven Schild; Jeffrey Bogart; Chen Hu; Kenneth Forster; Anthony Magliocco; Vivek Kavadi; Yolanda I Garces; Samir Narayan; Puneeth Iyengar; Cliff Robinson; Raymond B Wynn; Christopher Koprowski; Joanne Meng; Jonathan Beitler; Rakesh Gaur; Walter Curran; Hak Choy
Journal:  Lancet Oncol       Date:  2015-01-16       Impact factor: 41.316

5.  Independent test of a model to predict severe acute esophagitis.

Authors:  Ellen X Huang; Clifford G Robinson; Alerson Molotievschi; Jeffrey D Bradley; Joseph O Deasy; Jung Hun Oh
Journal:  Adv Radiat Oncol       Date:  2016-11-16
  5 in total

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