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Stereotactic body radiation therapy for oligoprogression of metastatic disease from gastrointestinal cancers: A novel approach to extend chemotherapy efficacy

Authors :
Thomas J. George
Anamaria R. Yeung
Karen Daily
Roi Dagan
Rana Fawzi Hawamdeh
Nalini Hasija
Robert A. Zlotecki
Judith L. Lightsey
Long H. Dang
Justin Wray
Jose G. Trevino
Paul Okunieff
Source :
Oncology Letters
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
D.A. Spandidos, 2016.

Abstract

Chemotherapy and targeted therapies are effective palliative options for numerous unresectable or metastatic cancers. However, treatment resistance inevitably develops leading to mortality. In a subset of patients, systemic therapy appears to control the majority of tumors leaving 5 or less to progress, a phenomenon described as oligoprogression. Reasoning that the majority of lesions remain responsive to ongoing systemic chemotherapy, we hypothesized that local treatment of the progressing lesions would confer a benefit. The present study describes the cases of 5 patients whose metastatic disease was largely controlled by chemotherapy. The oligoprogressive lesions (≤5) were treated with stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT), justifying continued use of an effective systemic regimen. A total of 5 patients with metastatic disease on chemotherapy, with ≤5 progressing lesions amenable to SBRT, were treated with ablative intent. Primary tumor site and histology were as follows: 2 with metastatic colon adenocarcinoma, 2 with metastatic rectal adenocarcinoma and 1 with metastatic pancreatic adenocarcinoma. Imaging was performed prior to SBRT and every 3 months after SBRT. In total, 4 out of the 5 patients achieved disease control for >7 months with SBRT, without changing chemotherapy regimen. The median time to chemotherapy change was 9 months, with a median follow-up time of 9 months. The patient who failed to respond developed progressive disease outside of the SBRT field at 3 months. In conclusion, the addition of SBRT to chemotherapy is an option for the overall systemic control of oligoprogressive disease.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17921082 and 17921074
Volume :
13
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Oncology Letters
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9ddc598a1e0385eef305598cec2ab0f2