1. Long-Term Results of Dose-Intensified Fractionated Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy (SBRT) for Painful Spinal Metastases
- Author
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Frederick Mantel, I. Madani, Nicolaus Andratschke, Michael Flentje, Reinhart A. Sweeney, Maria A. Hawkins, Matthias Guckenberger, José Belderbos, and Merina Ahmed
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Visual analogue scale ,Phases of clinical research ,Kaplan-Meier Estimate ,Radiosurgery ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,03 medical and health sciences ,Myelopathy ,0302 clinical medicine ,Life Expectancy ,medicine ,Clinical endpoint ,Confidence Intervals ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,Survival rate ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Radiation ,Spinal Neoplasms ,business.industry ,Dose fractionation ,Cancer Pain ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Survival Rate ,Treatment Outcome ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Disease Progression ,Quality of Life ,Female ,Dose Fractionation, Radiation ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Purpose To report long-term outcome of fractionated stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) for painful spinal metastases. Methods and Materials This prospective, single-arm, multicenter phase 2 clinical trial enrolled 57 patients with 63 painful, unirradiated spinal metastases between March 2012 and July 2015. Patients were treated with 48.5 Gy in 10 SBRT fractions (long life expectancy [Mizumoto score ≤4]) or 35 Gy in 5 SBRT fractions (intermediate life expectancy [Mizumoto score 5-9]). Pain response was defined as pain improvement of a minimum of 2 points on a visual analog scale, and net pain relief was defined as the sum of time with pain response (complete and partial) divided by the overall follow-up time. Results All 57 patients received treatment per protocol; 32 and 25 patients were treated with 10- and 5-fraction SBRT, respectively. The median follow-up of living patients was 60 months (range, 33-74 months). Of evaluable patients, 82% had complete or partial pain response (responders) at 3 months’ follow-up (primary endpoint), and pain response remained stable over 5 years. Net pain relief was 74% (95% CI, 65%-80%). Overall survival rates of 1, 3, and 5 years were 59.6% (95% CI, 47%-72%), 33.3% (95% CI, 21%-46%), and 21% (95% CI, 10%-32%), respectively. Freedom from local spinal-metastasis progression was 82% at the last imaging follow-up. Late grade-3 toxicity was limited to pain in 2 patients (nonresponders). There were no cases of myelopathy. SBRT resulted in long-term improvements of all dimensions of the 5-level EuroQol 5-Dimension Questionnaire except anxiety/depression. Conclusions Fractionated SBRT achieved durable pain response and improved quality of life at minimum late toxicity.
- Published
- 2020