4.4 Article

Outcomes of High-Dose Stereotactic Ablative Radiotherapy to All/Multiple Sites for Oligometastatic Renal Cell Cancer Patients

Journal

CURRENT ONCOLOGY
Volume 29, Issue 10, Pages 7832-7841

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/curroncol29100619

Keywords

stereotactic ablative radiation; stereotactic body radiation therapy; renal cell carcinoma; oligometastasis

Categories

Funding

  1. National High-Level Hospital Clinical Research Funding (Interdepartmental Clinical Research Project of Peking University First Hospital) [2022CR29]
  2. Beijing Xisike Clinical Oncology Research Foundation [Y-2019AZQN-0003]
  3. China International Medical Foundation [2019-N-11-07]

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This retrospective study investigated the efficacy and prognostic factors of high-dose SABR for oligometastatic RCC patients. The results showed that high-dose SABR had a certain efficacy in this patient population, and patients with a short time interval between radiation therapy and those who received radiation therapy before tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) failure had a better survival period.
Background: Stereotactic ablative body radiotherapy (SABR) is one of the treatment options for oligometastatic renal cell carcinoma (RCC) but is limited by a lack of data to evaluate high-dose SABR to all/multiple sites. Objective: This study retrospectively investigated the efficacy and prognostic factors of high-dose SABR for oligometastatic RCC patients. Design, setting, and participants: Patients with oligometastatic RCC on systemic therapy were retrospectively collected. Intervention(s): All patients were treated with SABR (40-50 Gy/5 fractions) for small tumors or partial-SABR (tumor center boosted with 6-8 Gy/3-5 fractions with 50-60 Gy/20-25 fractions to the whole tumor volume) for bulky tumors or tumors adjacent to critical organs. Outcome measurements and statistical analysis: Progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) were calculated. Results and limitations: In total, 35 patients were enrolled, of which 88.5% had intermediate- or high-risk disease, with 60% on second- to fourth-line systemic therapy. The median follow-up time was 17 months. The median PFS and OS times were 11.3 and 29.7 months, respectively. Univariate analysis showed that an OS benefit was found in patients who received radiation before tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) failure (p = 0.006) and where there was a short time interval (

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