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Palliative radiotherapy for painful bone metastases from solid tumors delivered with static ports of tomotherapy (TomoDirect): feasibility and clinical results.

Authors :
Franco P
Migliaccio F
Angelini V
Cante D
Sciacero P
Peruzzo Cornetto A
Casanova Borca V
Zeverino M
Torielli P
Arrichiello C
Girelli G
La Porta MR
Tofani S
Numico G
Ricardi U
Source :
Cancer investigation [Cancer Invest] 2014 Nov; Vol. 32 (9), pp. 458-63. Date of Electronic Publication: 2014 Sep 26.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Purpose: To evaluate the feasibility and response to palliative radiotherapy delivered with static ports of tomotherapy--TomoDirect (TD) in patients affected with painful bone metastases from solid tumors.<br />Methods: A prospective cohort of 130 patients (185 osseous lesions) was treated between 2010 and 2013 with TD. Three fractionation schedules were employed according to clinical decision-making (3 Gy × 10; 4 Gy × 5; 8 Gy × 1). Pain response was investigated at 2 weeks and 2 months (for evaluable patients). The Numeric Rating Scale (NRS-11) was used to assess pain. Response rates to radiotherapy were calculated following the criteria of the International Bone Metastases Consensus Group (IBMCG), accounting for the use of concomitant analgesics (response: complete or partial; non-response: stable pain, pain progression or "other"). Analgesic consumption was recalculated into the daily oral morphine-equivalent dose (OMED).<br />Results: Most of the patients had 1-2 bone metastases (91); those with multiple lesions mostly had a metachronous presentation (60%). Synchronous lesions were mainly approached with multiple plans (63%). Most treatments employed 3-4 fields (77%). Treatment times ranged from 255 to 939 s depending on fractionation, fields, and target lesions number. At 2 weeks, the median self-reported worst pain decreased significantly as median oral morphine-equivalent dose regardless of fractionation used. The response rate according to the IBMCG-based response categories ranged from 45 to 55%. Pain relief duration seems (response at 2 months) slightly inferior with the single fraction approach, with a higher re-treatment rate. At 2 weeks, the median self-reported worst pain and OMED significantly decreased regardless of fractionation (response rate: 49-55%). Pain relief decreased at 2 months, especially for single fraction (higher re-treatment rate).<br />Conclusion: TD is a valid option to deliver palliative radiotherapy for painful bone metastases from solid tumors.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1532-4192
Volume :
32
Issue :
9
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Cancer investigation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
25259607
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3109/07357907.2014.958495