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Effectiveness of stereotactic body radiotherapy in the treatment of inoperable early-stage lung cancer
- Source :
- Scopus-Elsevier, Europe PubMed Central, Web of Science
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Abstract
- Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is the leading cause of cancer death worldwide. Stereotactic body irradiation offers a non-invasive treatment modality for patients with early stage NSCLC who are not amenable to surgery or other invasive approaches because of their poor medical condition.Forty-three inoperable patients with NSCLC were treated with SBRT at our institution. A mean total dose of 30.5 Gy in 1-4 fractions was applied. The median follow-up duration was 14 months (range 6-36 months).The actuarial survival at two years was 53%: two patients died from cancer progression whereas a further 8 patients died from comorbidities. Acute toxicity was practically absent, with 7 (16.3%) patients suffering from grade 1 symptoms and two from (4.6%) grade II effects. At the time of this report, only 1 patient had grade II and 6 patients (13.9%) grade I chronic symptoms.Our results compare favourably with recently published studies and confirm that stereotactic radiotherapy has the potential to produce high local control rates with a low risk of lung toxicity in patients not amenable to curative resection. The low grade of side-effects is encouraging for shortening the treatment using a greater dose per fraction.
Details
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Scopus-Elsevier, Europe PubMed Central, Web of Science
- Accession number :
- edsair.pmid.dedup....bacaf36fc55658c3de364d11b4efbfe5