| Literature DB >> 34737959 |
Michael D Chuong1, Christopher L Hallemeier2, Heng Li3, Xiaorong Ronald Zhu4, Xiaodong Zhang4, Erik J Tryggestad2, Jen Yu1, Ming Yang4, J Isabelle Choi5, Minglei Kang5, Wei Liu6, Antje Knopf7, Arturs Meijers7, Jason K Molitoris8, Smith Apisarnthanarax9, Huan Giap10, Bradford S Hoppe11, Percy Lee4, Joe Y Chang4, Charles B Simone5, Steven H Lin4.
Abstract
Radiation therapy (RT) is an integral component of potentially curative management of esophageal cancer (EC). However, RT can cause significant acute and late morbidity due to excess radiation exposure to nearby critical organs, especially the heart and lungs. Sparing these organs from both low and high radiation dose has been demonstrated to achieve clinically meaningful reductions in toxicity and may improve long-term survival. Accruing dosimetry and clinical evidence support the consideration of proton beam therapy (PBT) for the management of EC. There are critical treatment planning and delivery uncertainties that should be considered when treating EC with PBT, especially as there may be substantial motion-related interplay effects. The Particle Therapy Co-operative Group Thoracic and Gastrointestinal Subcommittees jointly developed guidelines regarding patient selection, treatment planning, clinical trials, and future directions of PBT for EC.Entities:
Keywords: chemoradiation; esophageal cancer; passive scatter proton; pencil beam scanning; proton beam therapy (PBT)
Year: 2021 PMID: 34737959 PMCID: PMC8560961 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2021.748331
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Select dosimetric analyses of proton beam therapy versus intensity modulated radiation therapy for esophageal cancer.
| Author | Rx dose/Fx | PBT technique | PBT beam arrangement | Heart mean (Gy) | Heart V30 | Lung mean (Gy) | Lung V20 | Liver mean (Gy) | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PBT | IMRT | Rel. Δ | PBT | IMRT | Rel. Δ | PBT | IMRT | Rel. Δ | PBT | IMRT | Rel. Δ | PBT | IMRT | Rel. Δ | ||||
| Zhang et al. ( | 50.4/28 | PS | AP/PA | – | – | – | – | – | – | 4.5 | 9.6 | −53.1% | 9.7% | 15.6% | −37.8% | – | – | – |
| Welsh et al. ( | 65.8/28 | PBS | AP/PA | 19.9 | 21.2 | −6.1% | 23% | 25% | −8% | 3.2 | 8.3 | −61.4% | 7% | 14% | −50.0% | 4.9 | 14.9 | −67.1% |
| Ling et al. ( | 50.4/28 | PS | LAT/LPO | 12.6 | 28.5 | −55.8% | 20.9% | 42.3% | −50.6% | 6.0 | 9.5 | −36.8% | 15.3% | 16.2% | −5.6% | 3.6 | 18.1 | −80.1% |
| Wang et al. ( | 50.4/28 | PS | various | 13.0 | 19.2 | −32.3% | 21.2% | 23.7% | −10.5% | 6.3 | 9.3 | −32.3% | 21.7% | 31.4% | −30.9% | 3.7 | 12.4 | −70.2% |
| Shiraishi et al. ( | 50.4/28 | PS, PBS | AP/PA; others | 13.3 | 23.7 | −43.9% | 21.5% | 32.3% | −33.4% | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| Liu et al. ( | 50.4/28 | PBS | 2-4 beams | 7.6 | 21.9 | −65.3% | 11.5% | 18.5% | −37.8% | 3.7 | 8.6 | −57.0% | 8.6% | 10.3% | −16.5% | 2.6 | 15.3 | −83.0% |
| Makishima et al. ( | 60/30 | PS | AP/PA | – | – | – | 21.5% | 63.3% | −66.0% | 5.7 | 9.3 | −38.7% | 12.5% | 19.4% | −35.6% | – | – | – |
| Warren et al. ( | 50-62.5/28 | PBS | AP/LPO/RPO | 12.7 | 21.2 | −40.1% | – | – | – | 6.3 | 13.6 | −53.7% | 6.6% | 15.6% | −57.7% | – | – | – |
| Xi et al. ( | 50.4/28 | PS, PBS | PA/LPO | 11.6 | 19.9 | −41.7% | 18.9% | 24.4% | −22.5% | 6.5 | 10 | −35.0% | 11.3% | 18.4% | −38.6% | – | – | – |
| Hirano et al. ( | 60/30 | PBS | – | 11.7 | 9.4 | +24.5% | 22.0% | 50.7% | −56.6% | 5.8 | 9.4 | −38.3% | 11.7% | 17.8% | −34.3% | – | – | – |
| Macomber et al. ( | 50.4/28 | US, PBS | – | 9.6 | 25.8 | −62.8% | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| Celik et al. ( | 41.4/23 | PBS | LPO/RPO | 3.7 | 9.9 | −62.6% | 4.9% | 5.9% | −16.9% | 3.2 | 8.6 | −62.8% | 6.9% | 10.5% | −34.3% | – | – | – |
Rx, prescription; PBT, proton beam therapy; PBS, pencil beam scanning; PS, passive scattering; US, uniform scanning; Rel., relative; AP/PA, anteroposterior/posteroanterior; 3F, 3 field; LPO, left posterior oblique; RPO, right posterior oblique; LAT, lateral; Gy, Gray.
Select studies of clinical outcomes comparing proton beam therapy vs. x-ray therapy for esophageal cancer.
| Author | No. of patients(RT modality) | Study type | Treatment intent | Follow-up time | Survival | Toxicity or QOL outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Makishima et al. ( | 44 | Retrospective cohort | Definitive | NR | N/A | Grade 2+ pulmonary: XRT 18.2%, PBT 0%; |
| Xi et al. ( | 343 | Retrospective cohort | Definitive | 65.1 months | 5-year OS: IMRT 31.6% vs. PBT 41.4% ( | Grade 3–4: IMRT 45.0% vs. PBT 37.9% ( |
| Lin et al. ( | 580 | Retrospective cohort | Neoadjuvant | NR | N/A | Pulmonary complications: 3DCRT 39.5% vs. IMRT 24.3% vs. PBT 16.2% ( |
| Garant et al. ( | 128 (63 XRT, 62 IMPT) | Prospective registry | Definitive and Neoadjuvant | NR | NR | FACT-E PRO: less mean decline in PRO scores in PBT vs. XRT (−12.7 vs. −20.6, |
| Routman et al. ( | 144 | Retrospective cohort | Definitive and Neoadjuvant | NR | N/A | G4L: XRT 56% vs. PBT 22% ( |
| Davuluri et al. ( | 504 (317 IMRT, 187 PBT) | Retrospective cohort | Definitive and Neoadjuvant | 32.1 months | Median OS with or without G4L: 2.8 years vs. 5.0 years ( | G4L: IMRT: 33% vs. PBT 15.5% ( |
| Lin et al. ( | 107 | Prospective phase 2 randomized | Definitive and Neoadjuvant | 44.1 months | 3-year OS: IMRT 50.8% vs. PBT 51.2% ( | Mean TTB: IMRT (39.9; 95% highest posterior density interval, 26.2–54.9) vs. PBT (17.4; 10.5–25.0); |
3DCRT, three-dimensional conformal radiation therapy; IMRT, intensity modulated radiation therapy; PBT, proton beam therapy; IMPT, intensity-modulated proton therapy; NR, not reported; OR, odds ratio; XRT, X-ray (photon) radiation therapy; LOS, length of hospital stay; OS, overall survival; PFS, progression-free survival; DMFS, distant metastatic-free survival; G4L, grade 4 lymphopenia; FACT-E PRO, Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-Esophagus Patient Reported Outcomes; TTB, total toxicity burden; POC, postoperative complication.
Clinical trials of proton beam therapy for esophageal cancer.
| NCT ID | Title | Phase | Status | Outcome Measures | Institution |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 02213497 | Dose Escalation of Neoadjuvant Proton Beam Radiotherapy with Concurrent Chemotherapy in Locally Advanced Esophageal Cancer | I | Recruiting | Adverse events | Abramson Cancer Center, University of Pennsylvania |
| 02452021 | Pencil Beam Scanning Proton Radiotherapy for Esophageal Cancer | — | Active, not recruiting | Toxicity, surgical outcomes, post- operative complications, LOS, LRR, PFS, OS, QOL | Mayo Clinic |
| 03482791 | Proton Beam Therapy in the Treatment of Esophageal Cancer | II | Recruiting | Patient-reported outcomes, PFS, OS | Washington University School of Medicine |
| 01512589 | Proton Beam Therapy vs. Intensity-Modulated Radiation Therapy | II | Active, not recruiting | PFS, TTB | The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center |
| 01684904 | Proton Therapy for Esophageal Cancer | II | Recruiting | OS, adverse events | Loma Linda University Medical Center |
| 02023541 | Proton Beam Therapy to Treat Esophageal Cancer | I | Terminated | PFS, OS, QOL, toxicity | Washington University School of Medicine |
| 03801876 | Comparing Proton Therapy to Photon Radiation Therapy for Esophageal Cancer | III | Recruiting | OS, toxicity, pathologic response rate, lymphocyte counts, LRF, DMFS, PFS, QALY, cost–benefit economic analysis | Multicenter |
NCT, National Clinical Trials; LOS, length of [inpatient] stay; LRR, local-regional recurrence; PFS, progression-free survival; OS, overall survival, QOL, quality of life; TTB, total toxicity burden; LRF, local-regional failure; DMFS, distant metastasis-free survival; QALY, quality-adjusted life years.
Select studies of proton beam therapy reirradiation for cancers of the esophagus.
| Author | Number of patients | Prior RT dose (median) | Cumulative RT dose (median) | Median time to reirradiation | Non-RT treatments | Median follow-up | Disease-control outcomes | Survival outcomes | Toxicity outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fernandes et al. ( | 14 | 54 Gy (range 25.5–70 Gy) | 109.8 Gy (range 76-129.4 Gy) | 32 months (range 10–307 months) | Concurrent chemotherapy ( | 10 months (range 2–25 months) | 9/14 (64%) with LRR, 6/14 (43%) with DM, 8/10 (80%) with improved/stable dysphagia | Median OS 14 months (95% CI, 7–21 months), 1-year OS 71%. | Acute: grade 3: dehydration ( |
| DeCesaris et al. ( | 17 | 53.4 Gy (range 40–108 Gy) | 104.7 Gy (range 94-156 Gy) | 37.6 months (range 11.6–584 months) | Concurrent chemotherapy ( | 11.6 months (range 2.0–36.6 months) | 1-year LC 75.3%; | Median OS 19.5 months (95% CI, 5.7–33.3 months) | Acute: grade 3: dysphagia ( |
| Patel et al. ( | 3 | 36 Gy (range 15–36 Gy) | NR | 30 years (range 5–41 years) | Concurrent chemotherapy ( | 26 months (range 22–72 months) | 0/3 (0%) with LRR or DM | 3/3 (100%) alive at 22, 26, and 72 months post-op | Acute: mild/moderate odynophagia ( |
RT, radiation therapy; PBT, proton beam therapy; EC, esophageal cancer; SCC, squamous cell carcinoma; Gy, Gray; GyE, Gray equivalent; PS, passive scatter; PBS, pencil beam scanning; LRR, locoregional recurrence; DM, distant metastasis; OS, overall survival; CI, confidence interval; GI, gastrointestinal; DLBCL, diffuse large B-cell lymphoma; HL, Hodgkin’s lymphoma; LC, local control; DC, distant control; NR, not reported.
Figure 1Dosimetric comparison of treatment plans using all three modalities for a patient with distal esophageal cancer. VMAT, Volumetric Arc Therapy; PSPT, Passive Scattering Proton Therapy; IMPT, Intensity Modulated Proton Therapy; MHD, Mean Heart Dose; MLuD, Mean Lung Dose; MLiD, Mean Liver Dose.
Figure 2Monte Carlo dose calculation for a patient with distal esophageal cancer treated with 5,000 cGy in 25 fractions using pencil beam scanning proton beam therapy with two posterior oblique fields. (A) shows physical dose in cGy, (B) shows linear energy transfer (LET) in keV/μm, and (C) shows modeled biological dose incorporating physical dose and LET. Note that the high LET region is distal to the target in the heart.