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Clinical outcomes of stage I and IIA non-small cell lung cancer patients treated with stereotactic body radiotherapy using a real-time tumor-tracking radiotherapy system.

Authors :
1000080572495
Katoh, Norio
Soda, Itaru
Tamamura, Hiroyasu
Takahashi, Shotaro
Uchinami, Yusuke
Ishiyama, Hiromichi
Ota, Kiyotaka
1000010431363
Inoue, Tetsuya
1000080374461
Onimaru, Rikiya
1000050335262
Shibuya, Keiko
1000070114189
Hayakawa, Kazushige
1000020187537
Shirato, Hiroki
1000080572495
Katoh, Norio
Soda, Itaru
Tamamura, Hiroyasu
Takahashi, Shotaro
Uchinami, Yusuke
Ishiyama, Hiromichi
Ota, Kiyotaka
1000010431363
Inoue, Tetsuya
1000080374461
Onimaru, Rikiya
1000050335262
Shibuya, Keiko
1000070114189
Hayakawa, Kazushige
1000020187537
Shirato, Hiroki
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Purpose: To investigate the clinical outcomes of stage I and IIA non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients treated with stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) using a real-time tumor-tracking radiotherapy (RTRT) system. Materials and methods: Patterns-of-care in SBRT using RTRT for histologically proven, peripherally located, stage I and IIA NSCLC was retrospectively investigated in four institutions by an identical clinical report format. Patterns-of-outcomes was also investigated in the same manner. Results: From September 2000 to April 2012, 283 patients with 286 tumors were identified. The median age was 78 years (52-90) and the maximum tumor diameters were 9 to 65 mm with a median of 24 mm. The calculated biologically effective dose (10) at the isocenter using the linear-quadratic model was from 66 Gy to 126 Gy with a median of 106 Gy. With a median follow-up period of 28 months (range 0-127), the overall survival rate for the entire group, for stage IA, and for stage IB + IIA was 75%, 79%, and 65% at 2 years, and 64%, 70%, and 50% at 3 years, respectively. In the multivariate analysis, the favorable predictive factor was female for overall survival. There were no differences between the clinical outcomes at the four institutions. Grade 2, 3, 4, and 5 radiation pneumonitis was experienced by 29 (10.2%), 9 (3.2%), 0, and 0 patients. The subgroup analyses revealed that compared to margins from gross tumor volume (GTV) to planning target volume (PTV) ≥ 10 mm, margins < 10 mm did not worsen the overall survival and local control rates, while reducing the risk of radiation pneumonitis. Conclusions: This multi-institutional retrospective study showed that the results were consistent with the recent patterns-of-care and patterns-of-outcome analysis of SBRT. A prospective study will be required to evaluate SBRT using a RTRT system with margins from GTV to PTV < 10mm.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document, application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1378526213
Document Type :
Electronic Resource