Department of Oncology, Rigshospitalet, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark; Department of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark; Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland.
Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland; Division of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics, University of Maryland Greenebaum Comprehensive Cancer Center, Baltimore, Maryland.
Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys. 2020 Jun 1;107(2):299-304. doi: 10.1016/j.ijrobp.2020.01.010. Epub 2020 Jan 25.
More than a decade of randomized controlled trials in prostate cancer has established a positive radiation dose response at moderate doses and a consistently low α/β ratio in the linear quadratic model for moderate hypofractionation. The recently published large randomized trial of ultrahypofractionated prostate cancer radiation therapy adds substantially to our current knowledge of dose response and fractionation sensitivity.
Randomized trials of dose escalation and hypofractionation of radiation therapy were meta-analyzed to yield the overall best estimate of the α/β ratio. Additionally, a putative saturation of dose effect previously reported at approximately 80 Gy EQD2 was investigated by mapping the relative effectiveness assessed at 5 years onto a single reference dose-response curve.
Meta-analysis of 14 randomized trials including 13,384 patients yielded a best estimate of α/β = 1.6 Gy (95% confidence interval, 1.3-2.0 Gy) but with highly significant heterogeneity (I = 70%, P = .0005). Further analysis indicated an association between increasing dose per fraction in the experimental arm and increasing α/β ratio (slope, 0.6 Gy increase in α/β per Gy increase in fraction size; P = .017). This deviation from the linear quadratic model could, however, also be explained by biochemical control maxing out at doses above approximately 80 Gy.
Biochemical control data from randomized controlled trials of dose-per-fraction escalation in prostate cancer radiation therapy are inconsistent with the presence of a constant fractionation sensitivity in the linear-quadratic model and/or a monotonic dose response for biochemical control beyond 80 Gy equivalent dose. These observations have a potential effect on the optimal doses in future trials and the interpretation of ongoing trials of ultrahypofractionation.
在前列腺癌的十多年随机对照试验中,已经确定了中剂量的放射剂量反应为正,以及在线性二次模型中,中分割低剂量的α/β比值始终较低。最近发表的一项关于超分割前列腺癌放射治疗的大型随机试验大大增加了我们对剂量反应和分割敏感性的现有知识。
对放射治疗的剂量递增和分割的随机试验进行了荟萃分析,以得出α/β比值的最佳总体估计值。此外,通过将 5 年时评估的相对有效性映射到单一参考剂量反应曲线上,研究了以前报道的大约 80 Gy EQD2 处剂量效应饱和的情况。
对包括 13384 例患者的 14 项随机试验的荟萃分析得出了最佳的α/β估计值为 1.6 Gy(95%置信区间,1.3-2.0 Gy),但存在显著的异质性(I = 70%,P =.0005)。进一步分析表明,实验臂中每一分次剂量的增加与α/β比值的增加之间存在关联(斜率为,每增加 1 Gy 分剂量,α/β 增加 0.6 Gy;P =.017)。但是,这种偏离线性二次模型也可以解释为在 80 Gy 左右的剂量以上,生物化学控制达到最大值。
前列腺癌放射治疗中剂量-分次递增的随机对照试验的生物化学控制数据与线性二次模型中存在恒定的分割敏感性不一致,或者在 80 Gy 等效剂量以上,生物化学控制的剂量反应呈单调递增。这些观察结果对未来试验中的最佳剂量以及对超分割试验的解释有潜在影响。