Copenhagen, Denmark
Onsite/Online

ESTRO 2022

Session Item

Sunday
May 08
16:55 - 17:55
Poster Station 2
16: Lung
Ursula Nestle, Germany
2600
Poster Discussion
Clinical
Hypo- vs. standard fractionated radiotherapy in inoperable NSCLC not candidate for chemo-radiation
Olfred Hansen, Denmark
PD-0668

Abstract

Hypo- vs. standard fractionated radiotherapy in inoperable NSCLC not candidate for chemo-radiation
Authors:

Olfred Hansen1,2,3, Tine Schytte1, Lotte Holm Land1, Tine Bjørn Nielsen4, Morten Nielsen4

1Odense University Hospital, Oncology, Odense, Denmark; 2University of Southern Denmark, Institute of Clinical Research, Odense, Denmark; 3Odense University Hospital, Academy of Geriatric Research, Odense , Denmark; 4Odense University Hospital, Laboratory of Radiophysics, Odense, Denmark

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Purpose or Objective

The standard of radiation therapy (RT) for patients with inoperable NSCLC not candidate for SBRT or chemo-radiation is fractionated RT without chemotherapy. An alternative may be hypofractionated RT.  In a retrospective study, survival after hypo-fractionated RT regimen of 45 Gy/10 fractions (F) in 2.5 weeks was compared to a standard regimen of 66 Gy/30F in 6 weeks for patients treated 2014-2020

Material and Methods

Included were 45 patients with 45Gy/10F and 113 with 66Gy/30F in performance status (PS) 0-3 with unilateral or mediastinal tumors, no distant metastases at the time of radiation. Data on date of treatment, radiation dose and fractionation, site, and the gross tumor volume (GTV), age, gender, date of diagnosis, histology, tumor stage, white blood count (WBC) at time of radiation, performance status, a modified Charlson comorbidity index (CCI), body mass index (BMI), time span since diagnosis, and the date of death was recorded. Multivariable Cox proportional hazard analyses (COX) were performed for overall survival (OS) including factors with p <0.20 in univariate analyses. 

Some factors were dichotomized in the analyses: PS <2/≥2, Age </≥70 year, WBC </≥12 mmol/L, BMI </≥18.5 kg/m2, CCI <4/≥4. The volume of GTV was included logarithmically. All patients were treated with VMAT. For 45Gy/10F no clinical target volume was defined. Cutoff date was October 1st 2021 at which time the vital status was known for all patients.

Results

The median and minimal potential follow-up was 48.2 and 9.5 months for 45Gy/10F and 47.1 and 9.1 for 66Gy/30F. The median, 2, and 4 year OS was 24.0 months, 51%, and 31% for 45 Gy/10F, and 17.7 months, 36%, and 25% for 66 Gy/30F.

Excluded from multivariable analyses due to p >0.2 in univariate analyses were gender, histology, and N-stage. PS and Age were significant factors p <.02 and both were correlated with radiation dose. The analyses were therefore stratified PS <2/≥2 and age<70/≥70. In COX, time span since diagnosis, smoking habit, WBC, and BMI were insignificant factors with p>.10. The final model included log GTV (p=.003), CCI ≥4 (p=.034, HR=1.6). Radiation dose was not significant (p=.56)   

Conclusion

There was no significant difference in overall survival for hypofractionated RT 45Gy/10F and standard fractionated RT 66 Gy/30F for inoperable patients with NSCLC not candidate for SBRT or concurrent chemo-radiation.