Conger Rachael L, Mora Javier, Straza Michael W, Erickson Beth A, Lawton Colleen A F, Schultz Christopher J, Currey Adam, Bedi Meena, Siker Malika L, Hall William A
Department of Radiation Oncology, University of California-San Francisco, San Francisco, California.
Harvard Radiation Oncology Program, Boston, Massachusetts.
Adv Radiat Oncol. 2023 Mar 2;8(4):101206. doi: 10.1016/j.adro.2023.101206. eCollection 2023 Jul-Aug.
The changes in the recommended use of radiation therapy (RT) in the presence of expanding systemic cancer therapies and technological advances are poorly characterized. We sought to understand the recommended utilization of RT across a broad range of malignancies by examining National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) Guidelines.
We conducted a comprehensive review and categorization of RT recommendations, with their subsequent supporting evidence categories, in 3 versions of NCCN Guidelines, specifically years 2000, 2009, and 2019. These NCCN Guidelines were individually examined for RT-specific recommendations among the 10 most common tumors. The presence of RT as a recommended modality was recorded for each tumor type in each guideline. Recommendation categories including Category 1, 2A, 2B, and 3 were tallied and compared with examine totals and percentage distributions in each tumor type.
A total of 3858 NCCN recommendations were individually reviewed. The presence of a recommendation inclusive of RT increased from incidence of 205 in the year 2000 to 992 in the year 2019 (383%). In the 2019 NCCN Guidelines, the most Category 1 RT recommendations were found within small cell lung (13%), non-small cell lung (5%), breast (5%), bladder (2%), rectal (2%), and non-Hodgkin lymphoma (1%). Pancreatic, uterine, prostate, melanoma, kidney, and colon cancer guidelines had no Category 1 RT recommendations. Rectal cancer had 31 (27%) preferred recommendations. The majority (89%) of 2019 RT recommendations were for initial therapy, and 9% were specific to salvage therapy. Tumor sites with the highest proportion of RT Category 1 evidence were small cell lung (29%), non-small cell lung (24%), and breast cancer (24%).
The frequency of recommendations for using RT in NCCN Guidelines has increased by >300% in the past 20 years among the 10 most common malignancies. Consideration of the quality of evidence supporting these recommendations by tumor type is useful to identify specific malignancies in need of higher-level evidence supporting the role of RT.
在系统性癌症治疗不断扩展和技术不断进步的情况下,放射治疗(RT)推荐使用的变化情况尚未得到充分描述。我们试图通过研究美国国立综合癌症网络(NCCN)指南来了解RT在广泛恶性肿瘤中的推荐使用情况。
我们对NCCN指南的3个版本(具体为2000年、2009年和2019年)中的RT推荐及其后续支持证据类别进行了全面回顾和分类。分别检查这些NCCN指南中10种最常见肿瘤的RT特异性推荐。记录每个指南中每种肿瘤类型是否存在RT作为推荐治疗方式。统计包括1类、2A类、2B类和3类在内的推荐类别,并进行比较,以检查每种肿瘤类型中的总数和百分比分布。
共对3858条NCCN推荐进行了单独审查。包含RT的推荐发生率从2000年的205条增加到2019年的992条(增长383%)。在2019年NCCN指南中,1类RT推荐最多的是小细胞肺癌(13%)、非小细胞肺癌(5%)、乳腺癌(5%)、膀胱癌(2%)、直肠癌(2%)和非霍奇金淋巴瘤(1%)。胰腺癌、子宫癌、前列腺癌、黑色素瘤、肾癌和结肠癌指南没有1类RT推荐。直肠癌有31条(27%)优先推荐。2019年RT推荐中的大多数(89%)用于初始治疗,9%特定用于挽救治疗。RT 1类证据比例最高的肿瘤部位是小细胞肺癌(29%)、非小细胞肺癌(24%)和乳腺癌(24%)。
在过去20年中,NCCN指南中10种最常见恶性肿瘤使用RT的推荐频率增加了300%以上。按肿瘤类型考虑支持这些推荐的证据质量,有助于识别需要更高水平证据支持RT作用的特定恶性肿瘤。