Fowler Jack F, Tomé Wolfgang A, Fenwick John D, Mehta Minesh P
Department of Human Oncology, Medical School of the University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI, USA.
Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys. 2004 Nov 15;60(4):1241-56. doi: 10.1016/j.ijrobp.2004.07.691.
To investigate and compare the biologically effective doses, equivalent doses in 2-Gy fractions, log tumor cells killed, and late effects that can be estimated for the large fractions in short overall times that are now being delivered in various clinically used schedules in several countries for the treatment of cancer in human lungs, liver, and kidney.
Linear quadratic (LQ) modeling is employed with only the standard assumptions that tumor alpha/beta ratio is 10 Gy, pneumonitis and late complication alpha/beta ratios are 3 Gy, that intrinsic radiosensitivity of tumor cells is 0.35 ln/Gy, that no tumor repopulation occurs within 2 weeks, and that LQ modeling is valid up to 23 Gy per fraction. As well as the planning target volume (PTV), we propose a practical term called the prescription isodose volume (PIV) to be used in this discussion. In the ideal case of 100% conformity, PIV equals PTV, but usually PIV is larger than the PTV. Biologically effective doses (BED) in Gy(10) for tumors or Gy(3) for normal lung are calculated and converted to equivalent doses in 2 Gy fractions (= normalized total doses [NTD]), and to estimated log cell kill. How such large biologic doses might be delivered to tissues is discussed.
Tumor cell kill varies between 16 and 27 logs to base 10 for schedules from 4F x 12 Gy to 3F x 23 Gy. The rationale for the high end of this scale is the possible presence of hypoxic or otherwise extraordinarily resistant cells, but how many tumors and which ones require such doses is not known. How can such large doses be tolerated? In "parallel type organs," it is shown to be theoretically possible, provided that suitably small volumes are irradiated, with rapid fall-off of dose outside the PTV, and a mean dose (excluding PTV and allowing for local fraction size) to both lungs of less than 19 Gy NTD. If suitably small PTVs were used, local late BEDs have been given which were as large as 600 Gy(3), equivalent to 2 Gy x 180F = 360 Gy in 2-Gy fractions, with remarkably few complications reported clinically. Questions of concurrent chemotherapy and microscopic extension of lung tumor cells are discussed briefly.
Such large doses can apparently be given, with suitable precautions and experience. Ongoing clinical trials from an increasing number of centers will be reporting the results of tumor control and complications from this new modality of biologically higher doses.
研究并比较生物等效剂量、2 Gy分割等效剂量、对数杀灭肿瘤细胞数,以及针对目前在多个国家临床应用的多种治疗方案中,在短总治疗时间内给予大分割剂量治疗人类肺癌、肝癌和肾癌时可估算的晚期效应。
采用线性二次(LQ)模型,仅采用以下标准假设:肿瘤的α/β比值为10 Gy,肺炎和晚期并发症的α/β比值为3 Gy,肿瘤细胞的固有放射敏感性为0.35 ln/Gy,2周内无肿瘤再增殖,且LQ模型在每分割剂量达23 Gy时均有效。除计划靶体积(PTV)外,我们提出一个实用术语“处方等剂量体积”(PIV)用于本讨论。在100%适形的理想情况下,PIV等于PTV,但通常PIV大于PTV。计算肿瘤的生物等效剂量(BED)(以Gy(10)为单位)或正常肺组织的生物等效剂量(以Gy(3)为单位),并将其转换为2 Gy分割的等效剂量(=归一化总剂量[NTD]),以及估算的对数细胞杀灭数。讨论了如何将如此大的生物剂量给予组织。
对于4F×12 Gy至3F×23 Gy的治疗方案,对数杀灭肿瘤细胞数在以10为底的16至27之间变化。该范围高端的理论依据是可能存在缺氧或其他具有异常抗性的细胞,但尚不清楚有多少肿瘤以及哪些肿瘤需要如此高的剂量。如此大的剂量如何能被耐受?在“平行型器官”中,理论上表明只要照射体积足够小,PTV外剂量快速下降,且双肺的平均剂量(不包括PTV并考虑局部分割大小)小于19 Gy NTD,就有可能耐受。如果使用足够小的PTV,已给予的局部晚期BED高达600 Gy(3),相当于2 Gy×180F = 360 Gy的2 Gy分割剂量,临床报告的并发症极少。简要讨论了同步化疗及肺肿瘤细胞微观扩散的问题。
在采取适当预防措施并具备相关经验的情况下,显然可以给予如此大的剂量。越来越多中心正在进行的临床试验将报告这种生物高剂量新治疗模式的肿瘤控制和并发症结果。