STEREOTACTIC ABLATIVE RADIOTHERAPY IN LOCALLY-ADVANCED NON-SMALL-CELL LUNG CANCER: A PHASE II TRIAL
Fabio Arcidiacono ,
Italy
PO-1244
Abstract
STEREOTACTIC ABLATIVE RADIOTHERAPY IN LOCALLY-ADVANCED NON-SMALL-CELL LUNG CANCER: A PHASE II TRIAL
Authors: FABIO ARCIDIACONO1, PAOLA ANSELMO1, MICHELINA CASALE1, MARCO ITALIANI1, ALESSANDRO DI MARZO1, SARA TERENZI1, LORENA DRAGHINI1, MARCO MUTI1, STEFANIA FABIANI1, ERNESTO MARANZANO1, FABIO TRIPPA1
1Radiotherapy Oncology Centre, Oncology, Terni, Italy
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Purpose or Objective
To assess local control
(LC) and safety of stereotactic ablative radiotherapy (SABR) in unresectable
locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer (LA-NSCLC) patients enrolled in a
phase II trial.
Material and Methods
All patients were
unfit for concurrent chemo-radiotherapy (ChT-cRT). Neoadjuvant ChT was
prescribed only in fit patients. The tumor volume included primary tumor (T)
and CT-PET positive node/s (N). A simultaneous integrated boost (SIB) was
optimized to differentiate the dose for primary tumor (T) and lymph-node/s (N).
Results
73 LA-NSCLC patients
were recruited. The median age was 73 years (range,45-89) and 51 (70%) were
male. Histology was adenocarcinoma (ADK) and squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) in
56% and 44%, respectively. The stage was IIB, IIA, IIIB and oligometastatic IV
in 12 (16%), 34 (47%), 18 (25%) and 9 (12%), respectively. 60 (82%) had ultra-central
tumor with PTV overlapping the major airways. 43 (59%) received neoadjuvant ChT
and 10 (14%) adjuvant Durvalumab. In 35 (48%) cases T and N were separately
treated using SIB technique to administer a higher dose to T. Median prescribed
dose was 45 Gy (range, 35-55) and 40 Gy (35-45) in 5 fractions to T and N,
respectively. During a median follow-up of 20 months (range, 4-71), 20 (20%)
patients had experienced local recurrence (LR) at a median time of 16 months
(range, 4-30) and 24 had thoracic nodal-recurrence at a median time of 16
months (range, 4-28). 25 (34%) developed distant metastases 13 months after SABR
(range, 4-26). At last follow-up, 57 (78%) patients were alive, 27 (37%)
without radiological evidence of disease. No patients developed ≥ G3 acute and
late toxicities. The treatment compliance was 100%.
Conclusion
LA-NSCLC patients
treated with SABR had optimal LC and promising overall survival in absence of
≥G3 toxicity. Our prospective results provide an attraction to evaluate this
approach in selected LA-NSCLC patients unfit to concurrent ChT-cRT.