Van Asselt Nathaniel, Christensen Neil, Meier Valeria, Rohrer Bley Carla, Laliberte Sarah, Poirier Valerie J, Desai Noopur, Chen Yi, Turek Michelle
University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Veterinary Medicine, Madison, Wisconsin.
Division of Radiation Oncology, Vetsuisse Faculty, University of Zurich, Switzerland.
Vet Radiol Ultrasound. 2020 Jul;61(4):481-489. doi: 10.1111/vru.12868. Epub 2020 May 1.
Radiotherapy with or without surgery is a common choice for brain tumors in dogs. Although numerous studies have evaluated use of three-dimensional conformal radiotherapy, reports of definitive-intent, IMRT for canine intracranial tumors are lacking. Intensity-modulated radiation therapy has the benefit of decreasing dose to nearby organs at risk and may aid in reducing toxicity. However, increasing dose conformity with IMRT calls for accurate target delineation and daily patient positioning, in order to decrease the risk of a geographic miss. To determine survival outcome and toxicity, we performed a multi-institutional retrospective observational study evaluating dogs with brain tumors treated with IMRT. Fifty-two dogs treated with fractionated, definitive-intent IMRT at four academic radiotherapy facilities were included. All dogs presented with neurologic signs and were diagnosed via MRI. Presumed radiological diagnoses included 37 meningiomas, 12 gliomas, and one peripheral nerve sheath tumor. One dog had two presumed meningiomas and one dog had either a glioma or meningioma. All dogs were treated in the macroscopic disease setting and were prescribed a total dose of 45-50 Gy (2.25-2.5 Gy per fraction in 18-20 daily fractions). Median survival time for all patients, including seven cases treated with a second course of therapy was 18.1 months (95% confidence of interval 12.3-26.6 months). As previously described for brain tumors, increasing severity of neurologic signs at diagnosis was associated with a worse outcome. Intensity-modulated radiation therapy was well tolerated with few reported acute, acute delayed, or late side effects.
放疗(无论是否联合手术)是犬类脑肿瘤的常见治疗选择。尽管已有大量研究评估了三维适形放疗的应用,但关于犬颅内肿瘤的根治性调强放疗(IMRT)的报道却很缺乏。调强放射治疗的好处是可降低对附近危及器官的剂量,并可能有助于减少毒性。然而,使用IMRT提高剂量适形性需要精确的靶区勾画和每日患者定位,以降低遗漏靶区的风险。为了确定生存结果和毒性,我们进行了一项多机构回顾性观察研究,评估接受IMRT治疗的脑肿瘤犬。研究纳入了在四个学术放疗机构接受分次根治性IMRT治疗的52只犬。所有犬均表现出神经症状,并通过MRI确诊。推测的放射学诊断包括37例脑膜瘤、12例胶质瘤和1例周围神经鞘瘤。1只犬有两个推测的脑膜瘤,1只犬患有胶质瘤或脑膜瘤。所有犬均在肉眼可见疾病状态下接受治疗,总剂量规定为45 - 50 Gy(每天18 - 20次分割,每次分割2.25 - 2.5 Gy)。所有患者的中位生存时间为18.1个月(95%置信区间为12.3 - 26.6个月),其中包括7例接受第二疗程治疗的病例。如先前关于脑肿瘤的描述,诊断时神经症状严重程度增加与预后较差相关。调强放射治疗耐受性良好,很少有急性、急性延迟或晚期副作用的报道。