Vienna, Austria

ESTRO 2023

Session Item

Saturday
May 13
10:30 - 11:30
Strauss 3
Gynaecology
Diana-Cristina Pop (Patcas), Romania;
Maximilian Schmid, Austria
1270
Proffered Papers
Brachytherapy
10:30 - 10:40
Impact of brachytherapy applicator on morbidity and local control in cervix cancer: EMBRACE study
Monica Serban, Canada
OC-0129

Abstract

Impact of brachytherapy applicator on morbidity and local control in cervix cancer: EMBRACE study
Authors:

Monica Serban1,2, Sofia Spampinato2, Astrid de Leeuw3, Israel Fortin4, Nicole Nevascil5, Christian Kirisits5, Maximilian Schmid5, Umesh Mahantshetty6, Peter Hoskin7, Barbara Segedin8, Kjersti Bruheim9, Fleur Huang10, Bradley Pieters11, Remi Nout12, Richard Pötter5, Kathrin Kirchheiner5, Ina Jürgenliemk-Schulz3, Kari Tanderup2

1Princess Margaret Cancer Centre, Radiation Medicine Program, Toronto, Canada; 2Aarhus University Hospital, Department of Oncology, Aarhus, Denmark; 3University Medical Centre Utrecht, Department of Radiation Oncology, Utrecht, The Netherlands; 4Maisonneuve-Rosemont Hospital, University of Montreal, Department of Radiation Oncology, Montreal, Canada; 5Comprehensive Cancer Center, Medical University of Vienna, Department of Radiation Oncology, Vienna, Austria; 6Tata Memorial Hospital, Department of Radiation Oncology, Mumbai, India; 7Mount Vernon Hospital, Cancer Centre, London, United Kingdom; 8Institute of Oncology Ljubljana, Medical Faculty, University of Ljubljana, Department of Radiotherapy, Ljubljana, Slovenia; 9The Norwegian Radium Hospital, Oslo University Hospital, Department of Oncology, Oslo, Norway; 10Cross Cancer Institute and University of Alberta, Department of Oncology, Edmonton, Canada; 11Amsterdam University Medical Centers, University of Amsterdam, Department of Radiation Oncology, Amsterdam, The Netherlands; 12Erasmus MC Cancer Institute, University Medical Center Rotterdam, Department of Radiotherapy, Rotterdam, The Netherlands

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Purpose or Objective

To investigate the effect of brachytherapy (BT) applicator and implant type on morbidity and local control in locally advanced cervix cancer treated on the EMBRACE I study.

Material and Methods

1071 patients treated with tandem&ring (T&R) (n=725) and tandem&ovoids (T&O) (n=346) from 19 EMBRACE-I centres were analyzed. After receiving EBRT (45-50Gy in 25-30fx) and MR-guided BT (IGBT) using intracavitary (IC) (n=559) or intracavitary/interstitial (IC/IS) (n=512) implants, patients were prospectively followed (in median 48 months). Local control (LC) and physician-assessed (CTCAE v.3) late morbidity were compared based on (1) applicator type: T&R vs T&O, and (2) implant type: IC vs IC/IS. Moderate-to-severe (G≥2) genito-urinary (GU: cystitis, frequency), gastro-intestinal (GI: proctitis, bleeding, diarrhea) and vaginal (stenosis, mucositis) symptoms were analysed separately. Severe-to-life-threatening events (G≥3) were pooled for evaluation of GU, GI and vaginal morbidity. Comparisons between applicator and implant types were evaluated by Cox proportional hazard multiple regression model, adjusting for: patient (baseline morbidity, age, body mass index), disease (local FIGO stage, organ involvement, tumour dimensions, histology, tumour necrosis), and treatment-related confounders (CTV-HR D90%, EBRT dose) (Table 1), which were included in the multivariable analysis (MVA) if significant in the univariate analysis (p ≤ 0.15).

Results

OAR doses (bladder and rectum D2cm3; ICRU points) for T&O vs T&R were higher by 5-7Gy in IC implants and by 1-5Gy in IC/IS implants, while target dose (CTV-HR D90%) was lower by on average 2.5Gy in T&O compared to T&R applicators. Table 1 shows the hazard-ratios (HR) for individual G≥2 morbidity endpoints and pooled G≥3 GU/GI/vaginal/fistula morbidity in patients treated with T&O IC vs. T&R IC, T&O IC/IS vs. T&R IC/IS and IC vs. IC/IS applicators. In 3/7 and 6/7 evaluated individual symptoms (in IC and IC/IS implants, respectively), the T&O showed a statistically significant (p<0.05) higher risk for G≥2 morbidity compared to T&R. Figure 1 shows examples of adjusted cumulative hazard of individual endpoints (G≥2 cystitis, proctitis and vaginal stenosis). Crude incidence of local failure was 7.3% (25/343) and 6.6% (47/712) in patients treated with T&O and T&R, respectively. In MVA, local control did not statistically differ between the two groups (p>0.1).


Conclusion

In this patient cohort treated between 2008-2015, T&O applicators were associated with higher OAR and lower target doses as compared to T&R. The risk for G≥2 and G≥3 morbidity was higher for patients treated with T&O, while local control was similar. For IC/IS-treated large CTV-HR volumes >35cm3, target doses were higher by 3.5Gy compared to IC applicators. Nevertheless, combined IC/IS applicators did not increase the risk of morbidity compared to IC applicators.