Interruptions of once-daily thoracic radiotherapy do not correlate with outcomes in limited stage small cell lung cancer: analysis of CALGB phase III trial 9235
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Authors
Bogart, Jeffrey A.Watson, Dorothy
McClay, Edward F.
Evans, Lisa
Herndon, James E.
Laurie, Frances
Seagren, Stephen L.
FitzGerald, Thomas J
Vokes, Everett
Green, Mark R.
Document Type
Journal ArticlePublication Date
2008-10-01
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PURPOSE: Retrospective data suggests prolonging the time to complete thoracic radiotherapy (TRT) may negatively impact tumor control and survival in limited stage small cell lung cancer (LSCLC). We examined the association between TRT duration and outcomes on a prospective phase III study. MATERIAL AND METHODS: This review included 267 patients who received protocol TRT on a phase III CALGB LSCLC study assessing the addition of tamoxifen to standard chemo-radiotherapy. TRT, to a planned dose of 50Gy in 2Gy daily fractions, was initiated with the fourth chemotherapy cycle. TRT interruptions were mandated for hematologic toxicity (granulocytes<1000/mm3 or platelets<75,000/mm3) and esophageal toxicity (dysphagia necessitating intravenous hydration). RESULTS: TRT interruptions > or =3 days occurred in 115 patients (43%), most frequently during the 4th week of TRT, and did not differ between treatment arms. Hematologic toxicity and esophageal toxicity were the most frequent indications for interrupting TRT. Variables including advanced age ( > 70 years), gender, race, or radiotherapy treatment volume did not predict for TRT interruptions. Overall survival (OS) and local tumor control did not correlate with the administration of TRT interruptions or with TRT duration. CONCLUSION: Toxicity mandated interruptions of conventional dose, once-daily, TRT may not adversely affect outcomes for patients receiving TRT concurrent with chemotherapy (cycle 4) for LSCLC. The implications for accelerated or high dose TRT regimens are not clear.Source
Mar 25. Link to article on publisher's siteDOI
10.1016/j.lungcan.2008.02.006Permanent Link to this Item
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14038/46492PubMed ID
18367288Related Resources
Link to Article in PubMedae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1016/j.lungcan.2008.02.006