Robnett T J, Machtay M, Vines E F, McKenna M G, Algazy K M, McKenna W G
Hospital of the University of Pennyslvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys. 2000 Aug 1;48(1):89-94. doi: 10.1016/s0360-3016(00)00648-9.
To identify factors that may predict for severe radiation pneumonitis or pneumonopathy (RP), we reviewed a set of simple, commonly available characteristics.
Medical records of 148 lung cancer patients with good performance status (ECOG 0-1) treated definitively with chemoradiation from 6/92-6/98 at the University of Pennsylvania were reviewed. Actuarial survival and the crude rate of severe radiation pneumonitis were determined as a function of several variables. Potential predictive factors examined included age, gender, histology, stage, pulmonary function, performance status (0 vs. 1), weight loss, tumor location, radiation dose, initial radiation field size, chemotherapy regimen, and timing of chemotherapy. Univariate analysis (log-rank test) was performed for each variable. Multivariate analysis was performed using linear regression.
Median survival for the entire cohort was 14.7 months. Four patients were inevaluable for pneumonitis due to early death from progressive disease. Of the remaining 144 evaluable patients, 12 (8.3%) experienced severe RP. The most significant factor predicting for severe RP was performance status (p < 0.003). The risk of severe RP was 16% for PS-1 patients vs. 2% for PS-0 patients. Women were significantly more likely to develop severe RP than men (p = 0.01). Among 67 patients for whom pre-radiation therapy pulmonary function data were available, forced expiratory volume of the lung in 1 second (FEV(1)) was also significant (p = 0. 03). No patient suffering severe RP had a pretreatment FEV(1) > 2.0 liters. The median radiation dose was 59.2 Gy and median initial radiation field size was 228 cm(2). Neither radiotherapy factor predicted for RP. Other factors studied, including chemotherapy drugs, and schedule, also were not significant predictors of severe RP.
Pretreatment performance status, gender, and FEV(1) are significant predictors of severe radiation pneumonopathy, at least when using conventional radiation fields and doses. Complex radiation dose-volume algorithms that attempt to predict lung complication probabilities should probably incorporate these simply obtained clinical parameters.
为了确定可能预测严重放射性肺炎或肺病变(RP)的因素,我们回顾了一组简单且常用的特征。
回顾了宾夕法尼亚大学1992年6月至1998年6月期间接受放化疗的148例体能状态良好(东部肿瘤协作组0 - 1)的肺癌患者的病历。根据几个变量确定精算生存率和严重放射性肺炎的粗发病率。所检查的潜在预测因素包括年龄、性别、组织学类型、分期、肺功能、体能状态(0对1)、体重减轻、肿瘤位置、放射剂量、初始照射野大小、化疗方案以及化疗时间。对每个变量进行单因素分析(对数秩检验)。使用线性回归进行多因素分析。
整个队列的中位生存期为14.7个月。4例患者因疾病进展早期死亡而无法评估肺炎情况。在其余144例可评估患者中,12例(8.3%)发生了严重RP。预测严重RP的最显著因素是体能状态(p < 0.003)。PS - 1患者发生严重RP的风险为16%,而PS - 0患者为2%。女性发生严重RP的可能性显著高于男性(p = 0.01)。在67例有放疗前肺功能数据的患者中,一秒用力呼气量(FEV(1))也具有显著性(p = 0.03)。没有严重RP患者的预处理FEV(1) > 2.0升。中位放射剂量为59.2 Gy,中位初始照射野大小为228 cm(2)。这两个放疗因素均不能预测RP。所研究的其他因素,包括化疗药物和方案,也不是严重RP的显著预测因素。
预处理体能状态、性别和FEV(1)是严重放射性肺病变的显著预测因素,至少在使用传统照射野和剂量时如此。试图预测肺部并发症概率的复杂放射剂量 - 体积算法可能应纳入这些简单获取的临床参数。