| Literature DB >> 34064321 |
Alexander Rühle1,2, Anca-Ligia Grosu1,2, Nils H Nicolay1,2.
Abstract
Oncological outcomes for head-and-neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) patients are still unsatisfactory, especially for advanced tumor stages. Besides the moderate survival rates, the prevalence of severe treatment-induced normal tissue toxicities is high after multimodal cancer treatments, both causing significant morbidity and decreasing quality of life of surviving patients. Therefore, risk-adapted and individualized treatment approaches are urgently needed for HNSCC patients to optimize the therapeutic gain. It has been a well-known fact that especially HPV-positive oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) patients exhibit an excellent prognosis and may therefore be subject to overtreatment, resulting in long-term treatment-related toxicities. Regarding the superior prognosis of HPV-positive OSCC patients, treatment de-escalation strategies are currently investigated in several clinical trials, and HPV-positive OSCC may potentially serve as a model for treatment de-escalation also for other types of HNSCC. We performed a literature search for both published and ongoing clinical trials and critically discussed the presented concepts and results. Radiotherapy dose or volume reduction, omission or modification of concomitant chemotherapy, and usage of induction chemotherapy are common treatment de-escalation strategies that are pursued in clinical trials for biologically selected subgroups of HNSCC patients. While promising data have been reported from various Phase II trials, evidence from Phase III de-escalation trials is either lacking or has failed to demonstrate comparable outcomes for de-escalated treatments. Therefore, further data and a refinement of biological HNSCC stratification are required before deescalated radiation treatments can be recommended outside of clinical trials.Entities:
Keywords: HPV; cetuximab; chemotherapy; cisplatin; de-escalation; head-and-neck cancer; head-and-neck squamous cell carcinoma; oropharyngeal cancer; radiotherapy
Year: 2021 PMID: 34064321 PMCID: PMC8124930 DOI: 10.3390/cancers13092204
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Overview of important (chemo)radiotherapy de-escalation trials in which the radiation dose/volume was de-escalated. CRT = chemoradiation, RT = radiotherapy, OS = overall survival, PFS = progression-free survival, LRC = local/locoregional control, DMFS = distant metastasis-free survival.
| Study | # Patients | Phase | Study Arm(s) | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chera et al. [ | 44 | II | RT (60 Gy) + cisplatin (30 mg/m2 weekly) | 3-year LRC 100% |
| NRG-HN002 [ | 306 | II | RT (60 Gy) + cisplatin vs. RT (60 Gy) | 2-year PFS 90.5% (RT + cisplatin) vs. 87.6% (RT) |
| MC1273 [ | 80 | II | Adjuvant RT (30 Gy in 1,5 Gy twice per day or 36 Gy in 1,8 Gy twice per day) | 2-year LRC 96.2% |
| ECOG 3311 (ASCO abstract [ | 519 | II | Depending on the risk profile after resection: Regular aftercare (low-risk, group A), randomization between adjuvant RT with 50 Gy (group B) or 60 Gy (group C) (intermediate-risk), additive cisplatin-based CRT (66 Gy) (high-risk, group D) | 2-year PFS |
| AVOID [ | 60 | II | Omission of the postoperative RT for the primary tumor site | 2-year LRC 98.3% |
Summary of important (chemo) radiotherapy de-escalation trials in which induction chemotherapy was applied. RT = radiotherapy, OS = overall survival, PFS = progression-free survival, LRC = local/locoregional control, IC = induction chemotherapy, cCR = complete clinical remission, pCR = partial clinical remission.
| Study | # Patients | Phase | Study Arm(s) | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ECOG 1308 [ | 80 | II | In case of cCR after IC: RT (54 Gy) + cetuximab | 2-year PFS 80% |
| Chen et al. [ | 44 | II | After IC: RT (54 Gy) + paclitaxel for cCR or pCR, RT (70 Gy) + paclitaxel for absent cCR/pCR | 2-year LRC 95% |
| Quarterback [ | 20 | II | After IC: RT (70 Gy) + carboplatin vs. RT (56 Gy) + carboplatin | 3-year PFS 87.5% (70 Gy) vs. 83.3% (56 Gy) |
| OPTIMA [ | 62 | II | Complex study conception and treatment arm allocation in dependence of response to IC | Entire cohort: |
Summary of de-escalation trials based on assessment of peritherapeutic tumor hypoxia dynamics. RT = radiotherapy, CRT = chemoradiation, OS = overall survival, PFS = progression-free survival, LRC = locoregional control, DMFS = distant metastasis-free survival.
| Study | # Patients | Phase | Study Arm(s) | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lee et al. [ | 33 | Pilot | De-escalation of RT dose (60 Gy instead of 70 Gy) for patients with early tumor hypoxia response in week 1 of CRT | Entire cohort: |
| Riaz et al. [ | 19 | Pilot | De-escalation of RT dose (30 Gy instead of 70 Gy) for patients with absent tumor hypoxia at baseline or early resolution in the first 2 weeks of CRT | Entire cohort: |
Phase III de-escalation trials aiming to replace cisplatin with cetuximab. RT = radiotherapy, OS = overall survival.
| Study | # Patients | Phase | Study Arm(s) | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| De-ESCALaTE-HPV [ | 334 | III | RT (70 Gy) + cisplatin vs. RT (70 Gy) + cetuximab | 2-year local recurrence rate 6.0% (RT + cisplatin) vs. 16.1% (RT + cetuximab) |
| RTOG 1016 [ | 849 | III | RT (70 Gy) + cisplatin vs. RT (70 Gy) + cetuximab | 5-year PFS 78.4% (RT + cisplatin) vs. 67.3% (RT + cetuximab) |
Retrospective comparisons analyzing different CTV-PTV margin concepts. CTV = clinical target volume, PTV = planning target volume, LRC = locoregional control, OS = overall survival.
| Study | # Patients | Type | CTV-PTV Margin | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Navran et al. [ | 414 | Retrospective | 3 mm versus 5 mm | 3 mm versus 5 mm: |
| Chen et al. [ | 367 | Retrospective | 3 mm versus 5 mm | 3 mm versus 5 mm: |