Oleson J R, Samulski T V, Leopold K A, Clegg S T, Dewhirst M W, Dodge R K, George S L
Dept. of Radiation Oncology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC 27710.
Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys. 1993 Jan 15;25(2):289-97. doi: 10.1016/0360-3016(93)90351-u.
In previous work we have found that the cumulative minutes of treatment for which 90% of measured intratumoral temperatures (T90) exceeded 39.5 degrees C was highly associated with complete response of superficial tumors. Similarly, the cumulative time for which 50% of intratumoral temperatures (T50) exceeded 41.5 degrees C was highly associated with the presence of > 80% necrosis in soft tissue sarcomas resected after radiotherapy and hyperthermia. In the present work we have calculated the time for isoeffective treatments with T90 = 43 degrees C and T50 = 43 degrees C, respectively, using published thermal isoeffective dose formulae. The purpose of these calculations was to determine the sensitivity of treatment outcome to variations in thermal isoeffective dose.
The basis for the calculations were the thermal parameters and treatment outcomes in three patient populations: 44 patients with moderate or high grade soft tissue sarcoma treated preoperatively with hyperthermia and radiation; 105 patients with superficial tumors treated with hyperthermia and radiation, and 59 patients with deep tumors treated with hyperthermia and radiation.
The thermal dose values calculated are strongly associated with outcome in multivariate logistic regression analysis. Simple dose-response equations result from the analysis, and we use these equations to assess the sensitivity of outcome upon variations in thermal dose. This information, in turn, allows us to estimate the number of patients required in Phase II and III trials of hyperthermia and radiation therapy.
For regimens of 5 to 10 hyperthermia treatments, improvements in median T90 (superficial tumors) and T50 (deep tumors) parameters by 1.2-1.5 degrees C could result in response rates high enough (compared to radiotherapy alone) to justify Phase III trials. A similar improvement in response rates would require an increase in overall duration of treatment by a factor of 3 to 5. This would be difficult to achieve while also avoiding thermal tolerance induction. Achieving these temperature goals may be possible with improvements in hyperthermia technology. Alternatively, there may be ways to increase the sensitivity of cells to temperatures that can be achieved currently, such as pH reduction or chemosensitization.
在之前的研究中,我们发现90%的测量瘤内温度(T90)超过39.5摄氏度时的累计治疗分钟数与浅表肿瘤的完全缓解高度相关。同样,50%的瘤内温度(T50)超过41.5摄氏度时的累计时间与放疗和热疗后切除的软组织肉瘤中>80%坏死的存在高度相关。在本研究中,我们使用已发表的热等效剂量公式分别计算了T90 = 43摄氏度和T50 = 43摄氏度时等效治疗的时间。这些计算的目的是确定治疗结果对热等效剂量变化的敏感性。
计算的基础是三个患者群体的热参数和治疗结果:44例术前接受热疗和放疗的中高级别软组织肉瘤患者;105例接受热疗和放疗的浅表肿瘤患者,以及59例接受热疗和放疗的深部肿瘤患者。
在多因素逻辑回归分析中,计算出的热剂量值与结果密切相关。分析得出了简单的剂量反应方程,我们使用这些方程来评估热剂量变化时结果的敏感性。反过来,这些信息使我们能够估计热疗和放射治疗II期和III期试验所需的患者数量。
对于5至10次热疗方案,浅表肿瘤的中位T90和深部肿瘤的T50参数提高(1.2 - 1.5摄氏度)可能导致足够高的缓解率(与单纯放疗相比),从而有理由进行III期试验。类似的缓解率提高将需要将总治疗持续时间增加3至5倍。在避免诱导热耐受的同时,这很难实现。通过改进热疗技术可能实现这些温度目标。或者,可能有方法提高细胞对当前可达到温度的敏感性,例如降低pH值或化学增敏。