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Dose-escalated intensity-modulated radiotherapy in patients with locally advanced laryngeal and hypopharyngeal cancers: ART DECO, a phase III randomised controlled trial

Authors :
Dorothy M. Gujral
Kevin J. Harrington
Win Soe
Aisha Miah
M. Emson
David Bernstein
Katie Wood
James P Morden
Amen Sibtain
Matthew Beasley
Deborah Gardiner
Nachi Palaniappan
Audrey Cook
Teresa Guerrero Urbano
Shelia Fisher
Tom Roques
M. Rizwanullah
Mehmet Sen
Paul Sanghera
Emma Hall
Christopher D Scrase
Vivian P Cosgrove
Christopher M. Nutting
Clare Griffin
Shanmugasundaram Ramkumar
Elizabeth Junor
Shreerang Bhide
Catherine M West
Bernadette Foran
Hisham Mehanna
Source :
European Journal of Cancer. 153:242-256
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2021.

Abstract

Background Radical (chemo)radiotherapy offers potentially curative treatment for patients with locally advanced laryngeal or hypopharyngeal cancer. We aimed to show that dose-escalated intensity-modulated radiotherapy (DE-IMRT) improved locoregional control. Methods We performed a phase III open-label randomised controlled trial in patients with laryngeal or hypopharyngeal cancer (AJCC III-IVa/b, TNM 7). Patients were randomised (1:1) to DE-IMRT or standard dose IMRT (ST-IMRT) using a minimisation algorithm, balancing for centre, tumour site, nodal status and chemotherapy use. DE-IMRT was 67.2 gray (Gy) in 28 fractions (f) to the primary tumour and 56Gy/28f to at-risk nodes; ST-IMRT was 65Gy/30f to primary tumour and 54Gy/30f to at-risk nodes. Suitable patients received 2 cycles of concomitant cisplatin and up to 3 cycles of platinum-based induction chemotherapy. The primary end-point was time to locoregional failure analysed by intention-to-treat analysis using competing risk methodology. Findings Between February 2011 and October 2015, 276 patients (138 ST-IMRT; 138 DE-IMRT) were randomised. A preplanned interim futility analysis met the criterion for early closure. After a median follow-up of 47.9 months (interquartile range 37.5–60.5), there were locoregional failures in 38 of 138 (27.5%) ST-IMRT patients and 42 of 138 (30.4%) DE-IMRT patients; an adjusted subhazard ratio of 1.16 (95% confidence interval: 0.74–1.83, p = 0.519) indicated no evidence of benefit with DE-IMRT. Acute grade 2 pharyngeal mucositis was reported more frequently with DE-IMRT than with ST-IMRT (42% vs. 32%). No differences in grade ≥3 acute or late toxicity rates were seen. Conclusion DE-IMRT did not improve locoregional control in patients with laryngeal or hypopharyngeal cancer. The trial is registered: ISRCTN01483375.

Details

ISSN :
09598049
Volume :
153
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Journal of Cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....834b3682033cda2c33acf8ad8102accd
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejca.2021.05.021