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Pulmonary magnetic resonance-guided online adaptive radiotherapy of locally advanced non-small-cell lung cancer: the PUMA trial

Authors :
Sebastian Regnery
Chiara de Colle
Chukwuka Eze
Stefanie Corradini
Christian Thieke
Oliver Sedlaczek
Heinz-Peter Schlemmer
Julien Dinkel
Ferdinand Seith
Annette Kopp-Schneider
Clarissa Gillmann
C. Katharina Renkamp
Guillaume Landry
Daniela Thorwarth
Daniel Zips
Claus Belka
Oliver Jäkel
Jürgen Debus
Juliane Hörner-Rieber
Source :
Radiation Oncology, Vol 18, Iss 1, Pp 1-8 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
BMC, 2023.

Abstract

Abstract Background Patients with locally-advanced non-small-cell lung cancer (LA-NSCLC) are often ineligible for surgery, so that definitive chemoradiotherapy (CRT) represents the treatment of choice. Nevertheless, long-term tumor control is often not achieved. Intensification of radiotherapy (RT) to improve locoregional tumor control is limited by the detrimental effect of higher radiation exposure of thoracic organs-at-risk (OAR). This narrow therapeutic ratio may be expanded by exploiting the advantages of magnetic resonance (MR) linear accelerators, mainly the online adaptation of the treatment plan to the current anatomy based on daily acquired MR images. However, MR-guidance is both labor-intensive and increases treatment times, which raises the question of its clinical feasibility to treat LA-NSCLC. Therefore, the PUMA trial was designed as a prospective, multicenter phase I trial to demonstrate the clinical feasibility of MR-guided online adaptive RT in LA-NSCLC. Methods Thirty patients with LA-NSCLC in stage III A-C will be accrued at three German university hospitals to receive MR-guided online adaptive RT at two different MR-linac systems (MRIdian Linac®, View Ray Inc. and Elekta Unity®, Elekta AB) with concurrent chemotherapy. Conventionally fractioned RT with isotoxic dose escalation up to 70 Gy is applied. Online plan adaptation is performed once weekly or in case of major anatomical changes. Patients are followed-up by thoracic CT- and MR-imaging for 24 months after treatment. The primary endpoint is twofold: (1) successfully completed online adapted fractions, (2) on-table time. Main secondary endpoints include adaptation frequency, toxicity, local tumor control, progression-free and overall survival. Discussion PUMA aims to demonstrate the clinical feasibility of MR-guided online adaptive RT of LA-NSCLC. If successful, PUMA will be followed by a clinical phase II trial that further investigates the clinical benefits of this approach. Moreover, PUMA is part of a large multidisciplinary project to develop MR-guidance techniques. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT05237453 .

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1748717X
Volume :
18
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Radiation Oncology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.57a7f1814f1b42f2b6b611ba32a9e9c3
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13014-023-02258-9