Menu

Lung optimized treatment with CyberKnife® in inoperable lung cancer patients: feasibility analysis of a mono-institutional 115 patient series

  • Free access

Claudia Francia,  Giulia Marvaso, Gaia Piperno, Sara Gandini, Annamaria Ferrari, Maria Zerella, Simona Arculeo, Daniela Sibio, Cristiana Fodor, Matteo Pepa, Sara Trivellato, Elena Rondi, Sabrina Vigorito, Federica Cattani, Lorenzo Spaggiari, Filippo De Marinis, Roberto Orecchia, Delia Ciardo, Barbara Jereczek-Fossa

Abstract:

CyberKnife® Lung Optimized Treatment (LOT) allows the treatment of lung cancer without invasive fiducial implantation. The aim of this retrospective analysis was to evaluate the feasibility, toxicity and clinical outcome. One hundred fifteen patients (124 lesions) were treated with CyberKnife® using LOT. The median age was 72.6 years (range 31.8–90.3). From 124 treated lesions, 52 were with histopathological confirmation (41 primitive pulmonary cancers, 8 pulmonary metastases) and 72 as untyped tumors. For 5 patients (6 lesions) treatment was an in-field re-irradiation. Concomitant therapy was administered in 7 patients. Zero-View tracking was applied in 69 patients, 1-View in 33 patients, 2-View in 22 patients. The median total dose was 45 Gy (range 18–54), median dose/fraction was 15 Gy (range 4–18) with a median prescription isodose of 80% (range 68–85). The median planning target volume (PTV) was 25 cm3 (range 3–195). The median follow-up was 20 months (range 7–47). Thirty-seven patients (32%) were alive with no evidence of disease, 39 patients (34%) were alive with clinically evident disease, and 38 patients (33%) died of the disease. The 1- and 2-year overall survival (OS) rate was 83% and 61%. The median time to progression was 19 months (95% confidence interval: 11–19 months), 1- and 2-year progression-free survival (PFS) rates were 62% and 41%, respectively. Smaller PTV was significantly associated with better OS, PFS and in-field PFS in univariate and multivariate analyses. Acute toxicity was observed in 36 patients (41%). Late toxicity was registered in 25 patients (29%). G3 late toxicity was observed in one patient (1.1%). Our data suggest that fiducial less-stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) is a feasible, well-tolerated and potentially effective treatment with high compliance in the setting of inoperable patients due to concomitant disease or previous treatments.

Received date: 07/17/2019

Accepted date: 09/29/2019

Ahead of print publish date: 03/18/2020

Issue: 3/2020

Volume: 67

Pages: 684 — 691

Keywords: Lung cancer, Stereotactic radiotherapy, CyberKnife Lung Optimized Treatment, fiducial-less SBRT

DOI: 10.4149/neo_2020_190717N645

Pubmed

Shopping cart is empty