SABR in locally-advanced non-small-cell lung cancer elderly patients: little palliation or big cure?
Fabio Arcidiacono ,
Italy
PO-1269
Abstract
SABR in locally-advanced non-small-cell lung cancer elderly patients: little palliation or big cure?
Authors: FABIO ARCIDIACONO1, PAOLA ANSELMO1, MICHELINA CASALE1, MARCO ITALIANI1, SARA TERENZI1, ALESSANDRO DI MARZO1, STEFANIA FABIANI2, LORENA DRAGHINI1, MARCO MUTI1, FABIO TRIPPA1, ERNESTO MARANZANO1
1Radiotherapy Oncology Centre, Oncology, Terni, Italy; 2Rdiotherapy Oncology Centre, Oncology, Terni, Italy
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Purpose or Objective
In clinical practice many elderly patients are
unfit to chemotherapy (ChT) due to age and/or comorbidities and are candidates
to palliative radiotherapy (RT). There is a lack of prospective trials
regarding the best schedule treatment in this setting of patients. We enrolled
in a phase II trial unresectable locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer (LA-NSCLC)
elderly patients to assess effectiveness and safety of exclusive stereotactic ablative
radiotherapy (SABR).
Material and Methods
The cutoff of age ≥70 years was chosen as a commonly
used definition of elderly in LA-NSCLC patients. All patients were unfit for concurrent and/or sequential ChT-RT. 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
25 LA-NSCLC elderly patients
unfit for concurrent and/or sequential ChT-RT were recruited. Median age was 81 years (range,72-89)
and 15 (60%) were male. Histology was adenocarcinoma (ADK) and squamous cell
carcinoma (SCC) in 17 (68%) and 8 (32%), respectively. The stage was IIB, IIIA
and IIIB in 9(36%), 11(44%) and 5(20%) patients, respectively. All patients had
ultra-central tumor with PTV overlapping the major airways. In 8 (32%) cases T
and N were separately treated using SIB technique to administer a higher dose
to T. Median prescribed dose was 40 Gy (range, 35-50) and 40 Gy (35-45) in 5 fractions
to T and N, respectively. During
a median follow-up of 18 months (range,
4-71) 6 (24%) and 7 (28%)
patients had experienced isolated local recurrence and nodal regional recurrence at a median time of 9 (range, 7-17) and 9 months
(range, 4-17), respectively. 5 (20%)
patients developed distant metastases after a median time of 11 months (range,
4-26). At last follow-up, 19 (76%)
patients were alive, 11 (44%) without radiological evidence of disease. Treatment
compliance was 100% and no patients developed ≥ G3 acute and late toxicities.
Conclusion
LA-NSCLC elderly patients
treated with exclusive SABR had optimal local control and promising overall
survival with excellent treatment compliance and absence of ≥G3 toxicity. Our
preliminary prospective clinical outcomes provide an attraction to evaluate
this approach in elderly patients unfit to ChT, to obtain a “big” cure beyond “little”
palliation.