4.7 Article

Tolerance doses for late adverse events after hypofractionated radiotherapy for prostate cancer on trial NRG Oncology/RTOG 0415

期刊

RADIOTHERAPY AND ONCOLOGY
卷 135, 期 -, 页码 19-24

出版社

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.radonc.2019.02.014

关键词

Prostate cancer; Radiotherapy; Hypofractionation; Toxicity; Gastrointestinal; Genitourinary

资金

  1. NIH/NCI Cancer Center Support Grant [P30 CA008748]
  2. NCI [U10 CA180822]
  3. Janssen scientific Affairs
  4. ACR-NRG Oncology

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Purpose/objective: Hypofractionated radiotherapy (HRT) regimens for prostate cancer are emerging, but tolerance doses for late adverse events are scarce. The purpose of this study is to define dose-volume predictors for late gastrointestinal and genitourinary (GI and GU) toxicities after HRT in the multi-center NRG Oncology/RTOG 0415 low-risk prostate cancer trial (N = 521). Material/methods: Treatment in the studied HRT arm was delivered as 70 Gy at 2.5 Gy/fraction with 3D-CRT/IMRT (N = 108/413). At a median follow-up of 5.9 years, the crude late >= Grade 2 GI and GU toxicities were 19% and 29%, respectively. For modeling, the complete HRT cohort was randomly split into training and validation (70% and 30%; preserved toxicity rates). Within training, dose-response modeling was based on dose-volume cut-points (EQD2Gy; bladder/rectum: alpha/beta = 6 Gy/3Gy), age, acute >= Grade 2 toxicity, and treatment technique using univariate and multivariate logistic regression on bootstrapping (UVA and MVA). Candidate predictors were determined at p <= 0.05, and the selected MVA models were explored on validation where model generalizability was judged if the area under the receiver-operating curve in validation (AUC(validation)) was within AUC(training) +/- SD with p <= 0.05, and with an Hosmer-Lemeshow p-value (p(HL)) > 0.05. Results: Three candidate predictors were suggested for late GI toxicity: the minimum dose to the hottest 5% rectal volume (D5%[Gy]), the absolute rectal volume < 35 Gy, and acute GI toxicity (AUC = 0.59-0.63; p = 0.02-0.04). The two generalizable MVA models, i.e., D5%[Gy] with or without acute GI toxicity (AUC(validation) = 0.64, 0.65; p = 0.01, 0.03; p(HL) = 0.45-0.56), suggest that reducing late GI toxicity from 20% to 10% would require reducing D5%[Gy] from <= 65 Gy to <= 62 Gy (logistic function argument: 17 +(0.24D5%[Gy])). Acute GU toxicity showed only a trend to predict late GU toxicity (AUC(training) (=) 0.57; p = 0.07). Conclusion: Late GI toxicity, following moderate HRT for low-risk prostate cancer, increases with higher doses to small rectal volumes. This work provides quantitative evidence that limiting small rectal dose 'hotspots' in clinical practice of such HRT regimens is likely to further reduce the associated rates of GI toxicity. (C) 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

作者

我是这篇论文的作者
点击您的名字以认领此论文并将其添加到您的个人资料中。

评论

主要评分

4.7
评分不足

次要评分

新颖性
-
重要性
-
科学严谨性
-
评价这篇论文

推荐

暂无数据
暂无数据