Teckie Sewit, Lok Benjamin H, Rao Shyam, Gutiontov Stanley I, Yamada Yoshiya, Berry Sean L, Zelefsky Michael J, Lee Nancy Y
Department of Radiation Medicine, Northwell Health, New York, NY, United States; Hofstra Northwell School of Medicine, Hempstead, NY, United States; Department of Radiation Oncology, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, 1275 York Avenue, New York, NY 10065, United States.
Department of Radiation Oncology, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, 1275 York Avenue, New York, NY 10065, United States.
Oral Oncol. 2016 Sep;60:74-80. doi: 10.1016/j.oraloncology.2016.06.016. Epub 2016 Jul 12.
High-dose, hypofractionated radiotherapy (HFRT) is sometimes used to treat malignancy in the head-and-neck (HN), both in the curative and palliative setting. Its safety and efficacy have been reported in small studies and are still controversial.
We retrospectively evaluated the outcomes and toxicities of HFRT, including ultra-high-dose fractionation schemes (⩾8Gray per fraction), for HN malignancies.
A total of 62 sites of measurable gross disease in 48 patients were analyzed. The median follow-up was 54.3months among five survivors and 6.0months in the remaining patients. Median RT dose was 30Gray in 5 fractions; 20/62 lesions (32%) received dose-per-fraction of ⩾8Gray. Overall response rate at first follow-up was 79%. One-year local-progression free rate was 50%. On multivariate analysis for locoregional control, dose-per-fraction ⩾6Gray was associated with control (p=0.04) and previous radiation was associated with inferior control (p=0.04). Patients who achieved complete response to RT had longer survival than those who did not (p=0.01). Increased toxicity rates were not observed among patients treated with dose-per-fraction ⩾8Gray; only re-irradiation increased toxicity rates.
Despite the poor prognostic features noted in this cohort of patients with HN malignancies, HFRT was associated with high response rates, good local control, and acceptable toxicity. Sites that were treated with 6Gray per fraction or higher and had not been previously irradiated had the best disease control. A prospective trial is warranted to further refine the use and indications of HFRT in this setting.
高剂量、大分割放疗(HFRT)有时用于治疗头颈部(HN)恶性肿瘤,包括根治性和姑息性治疗。其安全性和有效性在小型研究中已有报道,但仍存在争议。
我们回顾性评估了HFRT治疗HN恶性肿瘤的疗效和毒性,包括超高剂量分割方案(每次分割⩾8格雷)。
共分析了48例患者中62个可测量的大体病灶部位。5名幸存者的中位随访时间为54.3个月,其余患者为6.0个月。中位放疗剂量为30格雷,分5次照射;20/62个病灶(32%)每次分割剂量⩾8格雷。首次随访时的总缓解率为79%。一年局部无进展率为50%。在多因素分析局部区域控制情况时,每次分割剂量⩾6格雷与控制情况相关(p=0.04),既往接受过放疗与较差的控制情况相关(p=0.04)。放疗后达到完全缓解的患者比未达到完全缓解的患者生存期更长(p=0.01)。在每次分割剂量⩾8格雷的患者中未观察到毒性率增加;只有再次放疗会增加毒性率。
尽管该组HN恶性肿瘤患者预后特征较差,但HFRT具有高缓解率、良好的局部控制和可接受的毒性。每次分割剂量为6格雷或更高且既往未接受过照射的部位疾病控制最佳。有必要进行一项前瞻性试验,以进一步完善HFRT在此情况下的使用和适应证。