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基于影像学的局部晚期非小细胞肺癌放化疗靶区缩小(PET-Plan):一项多中心、开放标签、随机、对照试验。

Imaging-based target volume reduction in chemoradiotherapy for locally advanced non-small-cell lung cancer (PET-Plan): a multicentre, open-label, randomised, controlled trial.

机构信息

Department of Radiation Oncology, Faculty of Medicine, Medical Center, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany; German Cancer Consortium Partner Site Freiburg and German Cancer Research Center, Heidelberg, Germany; Department of Radiation Oncology, Kliniken Maria Hilf, Mönchengladbach, Germany.

Department of Radiation Oncology, Faculty of Medicine, Medical Center, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany.

出版信息

Lancet Oncol. 2020 Apr;21(4):581-592. doi: 10.1016/S1470-2045(20)30013-9. Epub 2020 Mar 12.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

With increasingly precise radiotherapy and advanced medical imaging, the concept of radiotherapy target volume planning might be redefined with the aim of improving outcomes. We aimed to investigate whether target volume reduction is feasible and effective compared with conventional planning in the context of radical chemoradiotherapy for patients with locally advanced non-small-cell lung cancer.

METHODS

We did a multicentre, open-label, randomised, controlled trial (PET-Plan; ARO-2009-09) in 24 centres in Austria, Germany, and Switzerland. Previously untreated patients (aged older than 18 years) with inoperable locally advanced non-small-cell lung cancer suitable for chemoradiotherapy and an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status of less than 3 were included. Undergoing F-fluorodeoxyglucose (F-FDG) PET and CT for treatment planning, patients were randomly assigned (1:1) using a random number generator and block sizes between four and six to target volume delineation informed by F-FDG PET and CT plus elective nodal irradiation (conventional target group) or target volumes informed by PET alone (F-FDG PET-based target group). Randomisation was stratified by centre and Union for International Cancer Control stage. In both groups, dose-escalated radiotherapy (60-74 Gy, 2 Gy per fraction) was planned to the respective target volumes and applied with concurrent platinum-based chemotherapy. The primary endpoint was time to locoregional progression from randomisation with the objective to test non-inferiority of F-FDG PET-based planning with a prespecified hazard ratio (HR) margin of 1·25. The per-protocol set was included in the primary analysis. The safety set included all patients receiving any study-specific treatment. Patients and study staff were not masked to treatment assignment. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT00697333.

FINDINGS

From May 13, 2009, to Dec 5, 2016, 205 of 311 recruited patients were randomly assigned to the conventional target group (n=99) or the F-FDG PET-based target group (n=106; the intention-to-treat set), and 172 patients were treated per protocol (84 patients in the conventional target group and 88 in the F-FDG PET-based target group). At a median follow-up of 29 months (IQR 9-54), the risk of locoregional progression in the F-FDG PET-based target group was non-inferior to, and in fact lower than, that in the conventional target group in the per-protocol set (14% [95% CI 5-21] vs 29% [17-38] at 1 year; HR 0·57 [95% CI 0·30-1·06]). The risk of locoregional progression in the F-FDG PET-based target group was also non-inferior to that in the conventional target group in the intention-to-treat set (17% [95% CI 9-24] vs 30% [20-39] at 1 year; HR 0·64 [95% CI 0·37-1·10]). The most common acute grade 3 or worse toxicity was oesophagitis or dysphagia (16 [16%] of 99 patients in the conventional target group vs 17 [16%] of 105 patients in the F-FDG PET-based target group); the most common late toxicities were lung-related (12 [12%] vs 11 [10%]). 20 deaths potentially related to study treatment were reported (seven vs 13).

INTERPRETATION

F-FDG PET-based planning could potentially improve local control and does not seem to increase toxicity in patients with chemoradiotherapy-treated locally advanced non-small-cell lung cancer. Imaging-based target volume reduction in this setting is, therefore, feasible, and could potentially be considered standard of care. The procedures established might also support imaging-based target volume reduction concepts for other tumours.

FUNDING

German Cancer Aid (Deutsche Krebshilfe).

摘要

背景

随着放疗技术的日益精确和先进的医学影像学发展,放疗靶区规划的概念可能需要重新定义,以提高治疗效果。我们旨在研究在局部晚期非小细胞肺癌根治性放化疗中,与常规计划相比,靶区缩小是否可行和有效。

方法

我们在奥地利、德国和瑞士的 24 个中心进行了一项多中心、开放标签、随机、对照试验(PET-Plan;ARO-2009-09)。纳入了年龄大于 18 岁、无法手术的局部晚期非小细胞肺癌、适合放化疗、东部合作肿瘤学组体能状态评分小于 3 分的患者。患者接受 F-氟脱氧葡萄糖(F-FDG)PET 和 CT 进行治疗计划,并随机分配(1:1),使用随机数发生器和 4 到 6 个块大小,分为 F-FDG PET 和 CT 加选择性淋巴结照射(常规靶区组)或仅 PET 指导的靶区(F-FDG PET 指导的靶区组)。按中心和国际抗癌联盟分期分层随机分组。在两组中,分别对各自的靶区进行剂量递增放疗(60-74 Gy,2 Gy/次),并与同期铂类为基础的化疗联合应用。主要终点是从随机分组到局部区域进展的时间,目的是测试 F-FDG PET 指导的计划的非劣效性,预设危险比(HR)为 1.25。按意向治疗(ITT)集进行的预设分析纳入了符合方案集。安全集包括接受任何特定研究治疗的所有患者。患者和研究人员未对治疗分配进行盲法。本研究在 ClinicalTrials.gov 注册,NCT00697333。

结果

从 2009 年 5 月 13 日至 2016 年 12 月 5 日,311 名招募患者中,205 名患者被随机分配至常规靶区组(n=99)或 F-FDG PET 指导的靶区组(n=106;ITT 集),172 名患者按方案治疗(常规靶区组 84 名,F-FDG PET 指导的靶区组 88 名)。在中位随访 29 个月(9-54 个月)时,在符合方案集(1 年时,14%[95%CI 5-21] vs 29%[17-38];HR 0.57[95%CI 0.30-1.06])和 ITT 集(1 年时,17%[95%CI 9-24] vs 30%[20-39];HR 0.64[95%CI 0.37-1.10])中,F-FDG PET 指导的靶区组的局部区域进展风险均不劣于常规靶区组。F-FDG PET 指导的靶区组最常见的急性 3 级或更高级别的毒性为食管炎或吞咽困难(常规靶区组 99 名患者中有 16 名[16%],F-FDG PET 指导的靶区组 105 名患者中有 17 名[16%]);最常见的晚期毒性为肺部相关毒性(常规靶区组 9 名[9%],F-FDG PET 指导的靶区组 11 名[10%])。报告了 20 例与研究治疗相关的潜在死亡(常规靶区组 7 例,F-FDG PET 指导的靶区组 13 例)。

结论

F-FDG PET 指导的计划可能改善局部控制,似乎不会增加局部晚期非小细胞肺癌放化疗患者的毒性。因此,在这种情况下,靶区缩小是可行的,并且可能被认为是标准的治疗方法。所建立的程序也可能支持其他肿瘤的基于影像学的靶区缩小概念。

资助

德国癌症援助协会(Deutsche Krebshilfe)。

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