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Radiotherapy in Localized and Locally Advanced Lung Cancer

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Title: PREOPERATIVE RADIO-CHEMOTHERAPY FOR RECTAL CANCER Author: Marc Wygoda Last modified by: wygoda Created Date: 4/7/2002 2:19:14 PM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Radiotherapy in Localized and Locally Advanced Lung Cancer


1
Radiotherapy in Localizedand Locally Advanced
Lung Cancer
  • Marc Wygoda
  • Radiotherapy Unit
  • Hadassah University Hospital
  • Oncology State of the Art ISCORT
  • June 26th, 2009

2
XRT in Non Small Cell Lung Cancer
  1. PORT (Post Operative Radiation Therapy)
  2. Radiotherapy in stage III
  3. Radiotherapy in stage I-II

3
PORT Meta-analysis
4
PORT Meta-analysis Methodology
  • Trials of PORT vs Observation only
  • All Trials published and unpublished (Cochrane
    derived)
  • 1965-1995
  • Intent to Treat Analysis
  • 9 Trials found
  • 2128 patients

5
PORT Meta-analysis Trials
6
PORT Meta-analysis Results Survival
7
PORT Meta-analysis Results
8
PORT Meta-analysis Subgroups Results
9
PORT Meta-analysis Conclusions
  • 21 relative increase in the risk of death
  • Equivalent to an overall reduction in survival
    from 55 to 48 at 2 years

10
Why is the jury still out about PORT?
  • Benefit could be limited to N2 patients
  • Postoperative radiotherapy were more detrimental
    among patients with stage I disease than among
    those with stage II disease
  • For stage III patients alone, there was no clear
    evidence of a detrimental effect of RT
  • Optimal dose not determined
  • New techniques might improved therapeutic ratio

11
Benefit could be limited to N2 patients PORT
SEER Data on 7465 pts
12
PORT SEER DataAll patients
No PORT
PORT
13
PORT SEER DataNO and N1 patients
14
PORT SEER DataN2 patients
PORT
No PORT
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Conclusions about PORT in SEER Data
  • PORT is associated with a decrease in survival
    for N0 and N1 patients.
  • PORT significantly improved survival for N2
    patients.
  • The SEER data are retrospectively collected, and
    thus, the potential for error or bias may exist.

17
2) Optimal dose of RT and New techniques might
improved therapeutic ratio
  • Techniques used in Meta-analysis trials
  • Majority of pts treated on Cobalt machines
  • Some patients were treated with just one daily
    field (alternate AP and PA) ? suboptimal dose
    distributions, which may potentially increase
    toxicity
  • More than 30 were participants in one trial
    (French GETCB) allowing physicians to treat to 60
    Gy in 2.5 Gy fx.
  • Are modern RT techniques going to overcome the
    toxicity induced by older ones??

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20
U Penn PORT Analysis
  • 202 patients
  • Pathologic stage II or III disease (97)
  • Median dose 55 Gy in 1.8 to 2 Gy fx.
  • Techniques
  • Linac
  • Target volume
  • mediastinum, ipsilateral hilum, bronchial stump,
    ( supraclavicular fossa)
  • No contralateral hilum
  • Resimulation for off-Cord Cone down after 40-46
    Gy

21
U Penn PORT Analysis
  • Results
  • 4yr rate of Death from Intercurrent Disease
  • 13.5 after Radiotherapy
  • 10 in matched general population ns
  • 4yr rate of DID by RT dose
  • 0 for XRT 54 Gy
  • 17 for XRT gt 54 Gy p 0.06

22
U Penn PORT Analysis
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  • Clinical data can be explained by a simple model
    that suggests that RT-induced mortality is
    strongly dependent on field size and at least
    partly offsets the benefit afforded by PORT.
  • Smaller RT fields, tailored to treat the areas
    most at risk for recurrence, provide the highest
    therapeutic ratio.

26
Treatment Fields
  • The post-operative fields of today include the
    bronchial stump and one or two levels of the
    involved nodes
  • Patients tolerate this treatment extremely well
    without long-term toxicity

27
PORT in the era of effective Adjuvant Chemo
ANITA 5-Year Survival According to Nodal Status
and Treatment
N2 N1 N0 Nodal Status
Treatment
16.6 31.4 62.3 Observation
34.0 56.3 59.7 Chemo
21.3 42.6 43.8 PORT
47.4 40.0 44.4 CT PORT
28
Conclusions on PORT
  • Patients who underwent a complete resection of
    the primary tumor with mediastinal lymph node
    dissection showing no mediastinal involvement
    (pN0 and pN1) should not have PORT
  • N2 patients might benefit from PORT based on
    meta-analysis subset analysis, and on
    retrospective data
  • N1 patients with inadequately dissected/sampled
    mediastinum should also be considered for PORT
  • A new large European phase III, Lung Adjuvant
    Radiotherapy Trial (Lung ART), will compare 3D
    conformal PORT to no PORT, and will include
    patients who have proven N2 disease and a
    complete resection

29
Hadassah Policy and algorithm
  • Indications for PORT
  • R1 dissection (positive stump margins)
  • pN2 patients (NCCN approved)
  • pN1 with no mediastinal dissection or inadequate
    sampling
  • 3D planned as small as possible fields, based
    on tumors location and knowledge of LN stations
  • Dose 54 Gy
  • Optimal sequencing with chemo is unestablished
  • Chemo ? PORT
  • Concomitant ChemoRadiotherapy??

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32
Radiotherapy in stage III NSCLC
  1. Combined Modality Treatment
  2. Radiotherapy Volume and Dose issues
  3. Trimodality Therapy CMT Surgery
  4. Radiotherapy and Targeted Therapies

33
Combined Modality Treatment Sequential Therapy
  • In the early 1990s RT alone was standard of care
    with OS rates of 5-10
  • Initial development of Chemotherapy in Stage III
    NSCLC was sequential
  • Two studies CALGB and SWOG showed a significant
    benefit to SEQ CT-RT over RT alone

34
Concurrent CT-RT
  • Six randomized trials have now shown a conclusive
    advantage of CON-CT/RT over SEQ CT/RT
  • RTOG 9410
  • GLOT
  • WJLCG
  • CZECH

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Chemotherapy proven Regimens all Platinum based
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39
LAMP Phase II randomized trial
  • Induction (Carbo/Taxol) followed by Concomitant
    (CT/RT)
  • versus
  • Concomitant (RT/CT) followed by Consolidation

Belani et al JCO 05
40
CALGB 39801 Phase III TrialConcomitant vs
Induction?Concomitant
Vokes et al. JCO 07
41
CALGB 39801 Phase III TrialConcomitant vs
Induction?Concomitant
  • Median OS 12 (IND) vs 14 months (CON)
  • Neither arm performed well
  • But results are not different from LAMP results
    minus consolidation chemotherapy

42
SWOG 9504
  • Phase II trial
  • Stage IIIB patients
  • Cis/VP-16 (50/50)
  • RT to 61 Gy
  • Consolidation with Docetaxel

Median OS-26 months 3-yr 38 5-yr 29
43
Patterns of Failure
  • In CALGB Study (n366)
  • Local Failure 35
  • Distant Failure 46
  • SWOG 9504 (n97)
  • Local Failure 21
  • Distant Failure 29
  • The use of immediate and initial full dose CRT
    produces improvement both local and distant
    control

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46
SLCG 0008 (Pilar et al. ) Spanish Trial
  • GEM/Taxotere ? CT/RT (carbo/taxotere)
  • vs CT/RT ? GEM/Tax
  • No difference in OS 14.3 vs. 14.7 months
  • 10 grade 3 pneumonitis for induction GEM

47
Korean Phase III Trial (n134)
  • GEM/Cis x2
  • vs Cis/Taxol/RT alone
  • Overall Survival ---
  • Induction 12 months 2yr 25
  • Concurrent- 18.2 months-43 (p0.04)
  • WLCC Seoul 07

CT/RT(Cis/Taxol) 66 Gy
48
Summary
  • Results Favor CON or Consolidation
  • This despite some of these trials delivering less
    therapy

You shall remember! The more is not necessarily
the better.
49
Sequencing Summary
  1. No evidence to support Induction chemotherapy
    before Concurrent CT/RT probably worse
  2. Best results appear to be with Cisplatin/VP-16
    without consolidation
  3. This is also reflected in the current NCCN
    guidelines which encourage concurrent CT/RT with
    either Cis/VP-16 or Carbo-Taxol

50
Dose Escalation
  • RTOG 7301 Dose Escalation Study
  • Local Failure
  • 40 Gy split course, 49
  • 40 Gy 4 weeks, 44
  • 50 Gy 39
  • 60 Gy 33
  • This established 60 Gy as standard RTOG regimen

51
Theoretical Evidence for Escalation
  • Martel et al. ( Lung Cancer 99) calculated TCP-
    tumor control probability for NSCLC
  • Based on retrospective data from Michigan in 76
    patients treated with RT alone from 60-84 Gy.
  • Primary goal was to attempt to correlate LC with
    dose

52
Evidence for Dose Escalation
  • Rengen et al MSKCC reported dose escalation study
    with Con CT
  • Divided patients with stage III NSCLC into two
    group based on median radiation dose of 64 Gy

53
High Dose CT/RT
  • Two Cooperative group phase I/II trials have
    evaluated dose escalated radiotherapy with
    concurrent chemotherapy
  • CALGB- Two arm trial

Carbo/taxol
RT to 74 Gy
Gem (35) Q/wk
Gem arm closed due to toxicity but Carbo/taxol
arm was completed Median OS 24 months
Blackstock ASCO 06
54
RTOG 0117
  • Phase I/II trial of Dose escalated RT in Stage
    III A and IIIB patients
  • Carbo(AUC 2)/Taxol (50) with RT concurrent
  • 30 Patients have completed with acceptable
    toxicity and median OS of 21 months

Bradley ASCO 06
55
Proof for Dose Escalation
Multiple of High dose SBRT to the lung for T1 and
T2 disease have shown excellent LC and OS with
doses of 20 Gy x3 or 12 Gy x5
56
RTOG 0617/NCCTG N0628/CALGB 30609/ECOGStage III
NSCLC
Chemo XRT (60Gy)
Chemotherapy
Randomization
Chemotherapy
Chemo XRT (74Gy)
57
Dose Escalation Summary
  • Multiple Groups have reached 74 Gy of RT with
    concurrent platinum based therapy
  • Gemcitabine is not recommended for treatment with
    RT
  • Phase III trial is needed

58
Definition of the target volume
  • Conventional XRT
  • 3 DCRT
  • IGRT

59
Traditional 2D design of treatment portals
depending on location
  • Historically, treatment portals are designed
    with a 2-cm margin around any GROSS TUMOR seen in
    PA radiographies and approximately a 1-cm
    around electively treated regional LN areas.

60
Today
  • No elective nodal Radiotherapy (gtToxicity)
  • PET based volumes

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  • There are no current recommendations supporting
    the treatment of uninvolved LNs.
  • Existing guidelines are against the routine use
    of ENI in RT of NSCLC
  • European Organization for Research and Treatment
    of Cancer
  • National Institute for Clinical ExcellenceUK
  • Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network.
  • The newly activated RTOG and EORTC trials are not
    recommending ENI.
  • Use PET to define involved nodes but plan GTV
    based on CT images (usually larger)

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64
3DCRT delineation of GTV and OARs
65
Thanks for your attention
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