The technical challenges included commissioning of the Cobalt after-loader, dedicated brachytherapy procedure room, setting up of BT applicator sets (implantation kit, nylon tubes, beads etc.), orientation and training of ancillary staff.
Though incidence of HN cancers is high, proportion of patients deemed suitable for BT was low, due to advanced stage at presentation (Table 1). Multidisciplinary tumor board consultation before treatment initiation is quintessential for identifying patients who can potentially benefit from BT. Discussing organ preservation approaches with patients also helped increase BT utilization, especially for tongue cancer.
Among the 14 patients with tongue cancer, median tumor size was 2 cm, and clinical stage was T1 in 10 and T2 in 4 patients. All patients received prophylactic irradiation to bilateral neck nodes along with primary, using VMAT (50Gy/25#/5 weeks), followed by HDR Interstitial BT boost by CT based planning after a median gap of 22 days (range, 15-42 days). Most patients required implantation in two planes, with 9 to 15 catheters (median, 11). Median BT prescription dose was 22.5 Gy in 5 fractions in 3 days (range, 20 to 22.5 Gy), and cumulative EQD2 was 77.5Gy (10). Mandibular BT doses were limited to a median of 4.4 Gy (D 0.1 cc) and 3.15 Gy (D 1cc) per fraction.
At a median follow up of 16 months (range, 3 to 23 months), 11 out of 14 are alive and disease free. Among the three who had recurrence, one had local recurrence, one had locoregional and one developed local recurrence
with lung metastases. No long-term toxicity was observed during the limited follow up, except in one who developed early superficial asymptomatic mandibular radio-necrosis (mandibular dose of 81.1 Gy EQD2 and follow-up of 6;months) and managed conservatively.
Early HN Cancers treated with interstitial BT in study interval
| 21 |
Tongue | 14 |
Lip | 3 |
Buccal mucosa | 2 |
Tonsil | 2 |