4.7 Article

MRI-guided adaptive brachytherapy in locally advanced cervical cancer (EMBRACE-I): a multicentre prospective cohort study

Journal

LANCET ONCOLOGY
Volume 22, Issue 4, Pages 538-547

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC

Keywords

-

Categories

Funding

  1. Elekta AB
  2. Varian Medical Systems
  3. Vienna study office at the Department of Radiation Oncology, Medical University Vienna
  4. Austrian Science Fund (FWF) [KLI-695, L562-B19]
  5. Danish Cancer Society

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The EMBRACE-I study demonstrated that chemoradiotherapy and MRI-guided adaptive brachytherapy resulted in effective and stable long-term local control in patients with locally advanced cervical cancer, with limited severe morbidity.
Background The concept of the use of MRI for image-guided adaptive brachytherapy (IGABT) in locally advanced cervical cancer was introduced 20 years ago. Here, we report on EMBRACE-I, which aimed to evaluate local tumour control and morbidity after chemoradiotherapy and MRI-based IGABT. Methods EMBRACE-I was a prospective, observational, multicentre cohort study. Data from patients from 24 centres in Europe, Asia, and North America were prospectively collected. The inclusion criteria were patients older than 18 years, with biopsy-proven squamous cell carcinoma, adenocarcinoma, or adenosquamous carcinoma of the uterine cervix, The International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics (FIGO) stage IB-IVA disease or FIGO stage IVB disease restricted to paraaortic lymph metastasis below the L1-L2 interspace, suitable for curative treatment. Treatment consisted of chemoradiotherapy (weekly intravenous cisplatin 40 mg/m(2), 5-6 cycles, 1 day per cycle, plus 45-50 Gy external-beam radiotherapy delivered in 1.8-2 Gy fractions) followed by MRI-based IGABT. The MRI-based IGABT target volume definition and dose reporting was according to Groupe Europeen de Curietherapie European Society for Radiation Oncology recommendations. IGABT dose prescription was open according to institutional practice. Local control and late morbidity were selected as primary endpoints in all patients available for analysis. The study was registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT00920920. Findings Patient accrual began on July 30, 2008, and closed on Dec 29, 2015. A total of 1416 patients were registered in the database. After exclusion for not meeting patient selection criteria before treatment, being registered but not entered in the database, meeting the exclusion criteria, and being falsely excluded, data from 1341 patients were available for analysis of disease and data from 1251 patients were available for assessment of morbidity outcome. MRI-based IGABT including dose optimisation was done in 1317 (98.2%) of 1341 patients. Median high-risk clinical target volume was 28 cm(3) (IQR 20-40) and median minimal dose to 90% of the clinical target volume (D-90%) was 90 Gy (IQR 85-94) equi-effective dose in 2 Gy per fraction. At a median follow-up of 51 months (IQR 20-64), actuarial overall 5-year local control was 92% (95% CI 90-93). Actuarial cumulative 5-year incidence of grade 3-5 morbidity was 6.8% (95% CI 5.4-8.6) for genitourinary events, 8.5% (6.9-10.6) for gastrointestinal events, 5.7% (4.3-7.6) for vaginal events, and 3.2% (2.2-4.5) for fistulae. Interpretation Chemoradiotherapy and MRI-based IGABT result in effective and stable long-term local control across all stages of locally advanced cervical cancer, with a limited severe morbidity per organ. These results represent a positive breakthrough in the treatment of locally advanced cervical cancer, which might be used as a benchmark for clinical practice and all future studies. Copyright (C) 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available