| Literature DB >> 34717664 |
Sebastian M Christ1, Maiwand Ahmadsei2, Lotte Wilke2, Anja Kühnis2, Matea Pavic2, Stephanie Tanadini-Lang2, Matthias Guckenberger2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION ANDEntities:
Keywords: Multiple courses; Radiation therapy; Repeat irradiation
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34717664 PMCID: PMC8557578 DOI: 10.1186/s13014-021-01934-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Radiat Oncol ISSN: 1748-717X Impact factor: 3.481
Fig. 1Overall distribution of the number of radiotherapy courses per patient. RT radiation therapy
Patient characteristics
| Parameter | Data (n = 112 patients) |
|---|---|
| Age at primary diagnosis in years, median (range) | 56 (26–85) |
| Female gender, n (%) | 51 (45.5) |
| Primary tumor histology, n (%) | |
| Lunga | 47 (41.9) |
| Malignant melanoma | 10 (8.9) |
| Breast cancer | 9 (8.0) |
| Soft tissue and bone | 8 (7.1) |
| Colorectal | 7 (6.3) |
| Head and neck | 7 (6.3) |
| Otherb | 24 (21.4) |
| Alive at time of analysis, n (%) | 31 (27.7) |
aIncludes non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), small-cell lung cancer (SCLC), and mesothelioma
bIncludes prostate, urinary tract, endocrine, gynecologic, hematologic, esophageal and hepatocellular entities as well as cancer of unknown origin
Treatment characteristics
| Parameter | Data (n = 660 RT courses; n = 112 pts) |
|---|---|
| Number of RT courses, median (range) | 5 (5–10) |
| Number of RT courses per patient | |
| 5, n = patients (% of total patients) | 60 (53.6) |
| 6, n = patients (% of total patients) | 25 (22.3) |
| 7, n = patients (% of total patients) | 14 (12.5) |
| 8, n = patients (% of total patients) | 8 (7.1) |
| 9, n = patients (% of total patients) | 3 (2.7) |
| 10, n = patients (% of total patients) | 2 (1.8) |
| Treatment duration in days, median (range) | 14 (1–97) |
| Interval (years) between first and last radiotherapy course, median (range) | 3 (0–8) |
| Number of radiotherapy fractions, median (range) | 6 (1–35) |
| Dose per fraction in Gray, median (range) | 4 (1.8–20) |
| Total dose in Gray, median (range) | 30 (3–70) |
| Treatment intent | |
| Curative, n (%) | 147 (22.3) |
| Palliative, n (%) | 513 (77.7) |
| Treatment site | |
| Bone, n (%) | 265 (40.1) |
| Brain, n (%) | 214 (32.4) |
| Lung, n (%) | 71 (10.1) |
| Primary, n (%) | 36 (5.4) |
| Lymph nodes, n (%) | 29 (4.4) |
| Liver, n (%) | 16 (2.4) |
| Soft tissue, n (%) | 13 (2.0) |
| Adrenals, n (%) | 9 (1.4) |
| Other, n (%)a | 7 (1.1) |
Pts patients, RT radiation therapy
aIncludes mediastinum, kidneys, thyroid and pleura
Fig. 4Treatment intent over the course of multiple RT treatment courses. RT radiation therapy. *Patients may be counted more than once. **The non-linear trend between palliative and curative intent is due to the “dynamic oligometastatic state model”
Fig. 5Treatment time between different RT courses at our department. RT radiation therapy. 1Median time between courses is calculated based on all patients having received up to the nth course
Overview of survival statistics
| Parameter | Median OS | Median 5-year survival |
|---|---|---|
| From date of primary diagnosis, years; % | 6.1 | 57.3 |
| From 1st RT, years; % | 3.3 | 32.7 |
| From 1st curative RT, years; % | 4.1 | 39.2 |
| From 1st palliative RT, years; % | 2.4 | 24.9 |
| From 5th RT, years; % | 1.3 | 15.7 |
| From last RT, years; % | 0.6 | 8.5 |
OS overall survival, RT radiation therapy
Fig. 2Overall survival from time of a 1st RT treatment course, b 1st curative RT course. RT radiation therapy
Fig. 3Comparison of overall survival from a 1st RT for patients with 5 RT versus > 5 RT courses, (p value = 0.07), b date of primary diagnosis for patients with 5 RT versus > 5 RT courses, (p value = 0.48). RT radiation therapy