Radical accelerated radiotherapy for non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC): A 5-year retrospective review of two dose fractionation schedules
2019; Elsevier BV; Volume: 143; Linguagem: Inglês
10.1016/j.radonc.2019.08.025
ISSN1879-0887
AutoresStephen Robinson, Bilal Tahir, Katherine Absalom, Amila Lankathilake, T. Das, Caroline Lee, P.M. Fisher, Emma Bates, M. Hatton,
Tópico(s)Hepatocellular Carcinoma Treatment and Prognosis
ResumoBackground and purpose Numerous fractionation regimes are used for inoperable NSCLC patients not suitable for stereotactic ablative radiotherapy. Continuous hyperfractionated accelerated radiotherapy (CHART, 54 Gy, 36 fractions over 12 days) and hypofractionated accelerated radiotherapy (55 Gy, 20 fractions over 4 weeks) are recommended UK schedules. In this single-centre retrospective analysis, we compare both fractionation schemes for patients treated at our institution from 2010 to 15. Materials and methods Clinical demographic, tumour and survival data were collected alongside radiotherapy dosimetric data from the Varian Eclipse Scripting application programming interface. Differences were assessed using independent samples t-tests. Multivariate survival analysis was performed using Cox regression. Results We identified 563 eligible patients; 43% received CHART and 57% hypofractionated radiotherapy. Median age was 71 years, 56% were male, 95% PET staged with 53% WHO performance status 0–1. 30%, 14%, 50% and 6% were stage I, II, III and IV, respectively. 38% of patients underwent induction chemotherapy. 99% completed their prescribed radiotherapy treatment. Overall response rate was 50% with a 6.5% 90-day mortality rate. Median disease-free survival was 19 months, 50% recurred locally. Median overall survival was 22.5 months with 48% alive at 2 years. Multivariate analysis identified histology, stage, performance status, chemotherapy and radiotherapy response as independent predictors of survival; no significant differences between radiotherapy regimes were observed. Conclusion In our centre, CHART and hypofractionated accelerated radiotherapy produce similar outcomes. Dose escalation studies are in progress to develop these schedules to match outcomes reported in concurrent chemo-radiation studies.
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