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Institute
- Klinik und Poliklinik für Strahlentherapie (21) (remove)
Um Patienten mit Palliativbedarf proaktiv zu identifizieren wurde am Universitätsklinikum Würzburg am 01.03.2019 ein Palliativscreening auf Basis der Pflegeanamnese etabliert. Dessen Prädiktivität auf das 6-Monats Überleben wurde in der vorliegenden Arbeit in einer uro-onkologischen Patientenkohorte untersucht. Für die Patientenkohorte wurden aus dem klinischen Informationssystem aufenthalts-, personen- und tumorspezifische Daten sowie das Palliativscreening aus der Pflegeanamnese ausgelesen. Ergänzend zur Auswertung des automatisiert generierten Palliativscreenings wurden die Einzelitems rechnerisch in einem berechneten Palliativscreening zusammengeführt um eine Zuverlässigkeitsprüfung des automatisiert generierten Palliativscreenings zu ermöglichen. In einer zweiten Auswertung wurde geprüft, ob der Patient im 6-Monats Nachbeobachtungszeitraum nach Aufnahme verstorben ist.
Unsere Studie belegt die Prädiktivität des Palliativscreenings in einer uro-onkologischen Kohorte für das 6-Monats Überleben. Ein automatisiert generiertes Screening, ist in unserer Studie vergleichbar prädiktiv auf das 6-Monats Überleben als eine manuelle rechnerische Rekonstruktion.
Bei Patienten mit Prostatakarzinom weist das Palliativscreening eine niedrigere Korrelation mit dem 6-Monats Überleben auf als bei Patienten mit anderen urologischen Entitäten.
Background and Purpose
The standard treatment of glioblastoma patients consists of surgery followed by normofractionated radiotherapy (NFRT) with concomitant and adjuvant temozolomide chemotherapy. Whether accelerated hyperfractionated radiotherapy (HFRT) yields comparable results to NFRT in combination with temozolomide has only sparsely been investigated. The objective of this study was to compare NFRT with HFRT in a multicenter analysis.
Materials and Methods
A total of 484 glioblastoma patients from four centers were retrospectively pooled and analyzed. Three-hundred-ten and 174 patients had been treated with NFRT (30 × 1.8 Gy or 30 × 2 Gy) and HFRT (37 × 1.6 Gy or 30 × 1.8 Gy twice/day), respectively. The primary outcome of interest was overall survival (OS) which was correlated with patient-, tumor- and treatment-related variables via univariable and multivariable Cox frailty models. For multivariable modeling, missing covariates were imputed using multiple imputation by chained equations, and a sensitivity analysis was performed on the complete-cases-only dataset.
Results
After a median follow-up of 15.7 months (range 0.8-88.6 months), median OS was 16.9 months (15.0-18.7 months) in the NFRT group and 14.9 months (13.2-17.3 months) in the HFRT group (p = 0.26). In multivariable frailty regression, better performance status, gross-total versus not gross-total resection, MGMT hypermethylation, IDH mutation, smaller planning target volume and salvage therapy were significantly associated with longer OS (all p < 0.01). Treatment differences (HFRT versus NFRT) had no significant effect on OS in either univariable or multivariable analysis.
Conclusions
Since HFRT with temozolomide was not associated with worse OS, we assume HFRT to be a potential option for patients wishing to shorten their treatment time.
Diese Arbeit beschäftigt sich mit den Biomarkern Osteopontin und CD44 Standard, sowie CD44 Isovariante 6 beim Rektumkarzinom. Wir konzentrierten uns auf die prognostische Bedeutung von Osteopontin und CD44 Standard, sowie CD44 Isovariante 6. In einigen Vorgängerarbeiten zeigten sich Zusammenhänge vor allem bei der Tumorinduktion, Metastasierung und Überleben.
In unserer Arbeit konnten wir bestätigen, dass sich hohe Serumkonzentrationen von OPN bei Patienten mit Rektumkarzinom hochsignifikant negativ auf das Gesamtüberleben auswirken. Niedrigere Serumkonzentrationen sind daher mit einer günstigeren Prognose assoziiert. Dies zeigte sich auch in der durchgeführten multivariaten Analyse. Wir kommen daher zu dem Schluss, dass sich OPN als prognostischer Marker eignet.
In der Literatur zeigte sich CD44v6 mit verstärkter Metastasierung assoziiert. Dies konnten wir nicht bestätigen. Wir sahen CD44std und auch CD44v6 weder mit Gesamtüberleben, noch mit Tumorstadium und Metastasierung assoziiert. Auch wenn wir CD44 mit OPN gemeinsam auf das Gesamtüberleben untersuchten, fanden wir keinen signifikanten Einfluss.
Als mögliche Schlussfolgerung dieser Arbeit könnte man die aktuelle Therapie des Rektumkarzinoms bei hohen OPN Werten reevaluieren. Bei hohen Osteopontin Werten wären dann ggfs. aggressivere Therapieprotokolle vorstellbar.
Background
Boluses are routinely used in radiotherapy to modify surface doses. Nevertheless, considerable dose discrepancies may occur in some cases due to fit inaccuracy of commercially available standard flat boluses. Moreover, due to the simple geometric design of conventional boluses, also surrounding healthy skin areas may be unintentionally covered, resulting in the unwanted dose buildup. With the fused deposition modeling (FDM) technique, there is a simple and possibly cost-effective way to solve these problems in routine clinical practice. This paper presents a procedure of self-manufacturing bespoke patient-specific silicone boluses and the evaluation of buildup and fit accuracy in comparison to standard rectangular commercially available silicone boluses.
Methods
3D-conformal silicone boluses were custom-built to cover the surgical scar region of 25 patients who received adjuvant radiotherapy of head and neck cancer at the University Hospital Würzburg. During a standard CT-based planning procedure, a 5-mm-thick 3D bolus contour was generated to cover the radiopaque marked surgical scar with an additional safety margin. From these digital contours, molds were 3D printed and poured with silicone. Dose measurements for both types of boluses were performed with radiochromic films (EBT3) at three points per patient—at least one aimed to be in the high-dose area (scar) and one in the lower-dose area (spared healthy skin). Surface–bolus distance, which ideally should not be present, was determined from cone-beam CT performed for positioning control. The dosimetric influence of surface–bolus distance was also determined on slab phantom for different field sizes. The trial was performed with hardware that may be routinely available in every radiotherapy department, with the exception of the 3D printer. The required number of patients was determined based on the results of preparatory measurements with the help of the statistical consultancy of the University of Würzburg. The number of measuring points represents the total number of patients.
Results
In the high-dose area of the scar, there was a significantly better intended dose buildup of 2.45% (95%CI 0.0014–0.0477, p = 0.038, N = 30) in favor of a 3D-conformal bolus. Median distances between the body surface and bolus differed significantly between 3D-conformal and commercially available boluses (3.5 vs. 7.9 mm, p = 0.001). The surface dose at the slab phantom did not differ between commercially available and 3D-conformal boluses. Increasing the surface–bolus distance from 5 to 10 mm decreased the surface dose by approximately 2% and 11% in the 6 × 6- and 3 × 3-cm2 fields, respectively. In comparison to the commercially available bolus, an unintended dose buildup in the healthy skin areas was reduced by 25.9% (95%CI 19.5–32.3, p < 0.01, N = 37) using the 3D-conformal bolus limited to the region surrounding the surgical scar.
Conclusions
Using 3D-conformal boluses allows a comparison to the commercially available boluses’ dose buildup in the covered areas. Smaller field size is prone to a larger surface–bolus distance effect. Higher conformity of 3D-conformal boluses reduces this effect. This may be especially relevant for volumetric modulated arc therapy (VMAT) and intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) techniques with a huge number of smaller fields. High conformity of 3D-conformal boluses reduces an unintended dose buildup in healthy skin. The limiting factor in the conformity of 3D-conformal boluses in our setting was the immobilization mask, which was produced primarily for the 3D boluses. The mask itself limited tight contact of subsequently produced 3D-conformal boluses to the mask-covered body areas. In this respect, bolus adjustment before mask fabrication will be done in the future setting.
Hintergrund: Etwa 75% der Patienten mit malignen Tumoren im Kopf-Hals-Bereich unterziehen sich im Verlauf ihrer Behandlung einer Strahlentherapie. Zwei Drittel befanden sich bei Erstdiagnose bereits im lokal fortgeschrittenem Stadium. Eine Weiterentwicklung der Bestrahlungstechniken zielt einerseits auf eine Verbesserung der Tumorkontrolle andererseits auf eine Präzisierung der Strahlenapplikation zur Minimierung von Akut- und Spätrektionen.
Methode: In dieser Arbeit wurde ein Patientenklientel (118 Patienten (39 Frauen/79 Männer) untersucht, bei welchem aufgrund eines malignen Tumors im Kopf-Hals-Bereich eine kurative adjuvante intensitätsmodulierte Radiotherapie (IMRT) durchgeführt wurde (zweistufig 60/66Gy). 46,6 % der Patienten mit Tumoren im UICC-Stadium III und IV erhielten risikoadaptiert eine simultane Chemotherapie. Das Follow-Up der Dokumentation der Nebenwirkungen lag median bei 16 Monaten. Die minimale Nachbeobachtungszeit des Überlebens betrug 60 Monate.
Ergebnisse: Das 3-Jahres- bzw. 5-Jahres-Gesamtüberleben des betrachteten Patientenkollektivs betrug 69,4 % bzw. 53,4 %. Bei 16 Patienten (13,9 %) wurden Fernmetastasen diagnostiziert. 17 Patienten (14,7 %) entwickelten ein lokales Tumorrezidiv. Die lokoregionäre Tumorkontrolle betrug 84,3 % nach 3 Jahren und 82,9 % nach 5 Jahren. Als stärkster Prognosefaktor erwies sich das prätherapeutische Gesamttumorvolumen von > 22ml.
Die am häufigsten beobachtete höhergradige Frühtoxizität war die orale Mukositis Grad 3, die radiogene Dysphagie Grad 3 sowie Xerostomie Grad 3. Zum Zeitpunkt der Erfassung der Spätnebenwirkungen wurde bei 2,8 % (alleinige RT) bzw. bei 4,2 % (RCHT) der Patienten eine Xerostomie Grad-3 beobachtet. 5,4 % (RT) bzw. 12,5 % (RCHT) gaben eine Dysphagie Grad 3 an, 8,1 % (RT) bzw. 12,5 % (RCHT) beklagten noch Störungen der Nahrungsaufnahme Grad 3. 2,8 % (RT) bzw. 16,7 % (RCHT) boten eine Heiserkeit Grad 3.
Schlussfolgerung: Die vorliegende Arbeit hat ein Patientenkollektiv untersucht, bei dem im Vergleich zu einer historischen Kohorte die Gesamtdosis im unmittelbaren Tumorbett angehoben wurde, bei gleichzeitiger Schonung der Umgebung durch die Technik der Intensitätsmodulierten Strahlentherapie (IMRT). Dies wirkte sich positiv in der Verträglichkeit aus. Bei aller Schwierigkeit von Kohortenvergleichen war festzustellen, dass eine moderate Verbesserung der Therapieresultate erreicht wurde und dass insbesondere historisch bekannte Risikofaktoren für Lokalrezidive (R-Status, Perinodale Invasion, Hämangiose) mit diesem Behandlungskonzept ihre Bedeutung zu verlieren scheinen.
Die vorliegende Arbeit untersucht die stereotaktische Bestrahlung von Lungenmetastasen am Universitätsklinikum Würzburg im Zeitraum von 1997 bis 2012. In diesem Zeitraum wurden am Institut für Strahlentherapie der Universitätsklinik Würzburg 102 Patienten bestrahlt. Es sollen Einflussfaktoren auf die wesentlichen Endpunkte lokale Kontrolle, systemische Kontrolle und das Überleben identifiziert werden. Die Arbeit zeigt, dass die stereotaktische Bestrahlung eine nebenwirkungsarme und effektive Therapie von Lungenmetastasen darstellt und soll einen Beitrag dazu leisten, die Einflüsse und Ergebnisse der stereotaktischen Bestrahlung zu objektivieren und zusätzliches Datenmaterial für zukünftige Studien liefern. Das untersuchte Kollektiv der Universitätsklinik Würzburg gehört zum Zeitpunkt der Studie zu den größten in den auf diesem Gebiet durchgeführten Single-Center-Studien.
Die vorliegende Arbeit soll dazu dienen, die Strahlentherapie bei Patienten mit histologisch gesichertem, nicht-kleinzelligen Bronchialkarzinom nach 3D-konformalem sowie intensitätsmoduliertem Schema anhand definierter Outcome-Parameter und ihrer Nebenwirkungsraten zu vergleichen. Insgesamt wurde für diese monozentrisch durchgeführte Studie mit retrospektivem Design ein Kollektiv aus 111 Patienten/-innen untersucht.
Anhand des untersuchtem Kollektivs konnte gezeigt werden, dass beide Therapieverfahren bezüglich der Überlebensraten und der Rezidiv- bzw. Metastasierungshäufigkeit im Rahmen des beobachteten Studienzeitraums miteinander vergleichbar sind. Auch für die Häufigkeit akuter Therapie-assoziierter Nebenwirkungen konnte kein signifikanter Unterschied zwischen den beiden Bestrahlungstechniken nachgewiesen werden; dagegen trat eine chronische Strahlenpneumonitis häufiger in der Patientengruppe auf, die primär eine 3D-CRT erhalten hatte.
Hintergrund: Die Qualitätsindikatoren „QI2: Reduktion Schmerz“ und „QI 3: Opiate und Laxantien“ der S3-Leitlinie „Palliativmedizin für Patienten mit einer nicht heilbaren Krebserkrankung“ von 2015 wurden pilotiert und hinsichtlich ihrer Erhebbarkeit, Eindeutigkeit und Vergleichbarkeit evaluiert. Damit sollte die Routinetauglichkeit der Qualitätsindikatoren überprüft und ein Beitrag zu deren Weiterentwicklung geleistet werden.
Methodik: Die Qualitätsindikatoren wurden retrospektiv für die Patientinnen und Patienten der Palliativstation des Universitätsklinikums Würzburg der Jahre 2015 und 2018 mit der Hauptdiagnose einer nicht heilbaren Krebserkrankung ausgewertet. Aufbauend auf den Vorgaben der S3-LL Palliativ Langversion 1.0 2015 wurde der Qualitätsindikator Reduktion Schmerz (QI RS) für den gesamten Zeitraum des stationären Aufenthalts erhoben. Der Qualitätsindikator Opioide und Laxantien wurde am 3. Tag des stationären Aufenthalts (QI OL T1) und am 3. Tag vor stationärer Entlassung (QI OL T2) erhoben.
Ergebnisse: Bei 78,5% der Grundgesamtheit wurden moderate bis starke Schmerzen dokumentiert und für den QI RS eingeschlossen (419/534). Die Datengrundlage des QI RS war für die eingeschlossenen Fälle vollständig, da Schmerzanamnesen im Schmerzassessment der pflegerischen Dokumentation integriert sind: Unter den eingeschlossenen Fällen lag nach den Kriterien des QI RS bei insgesamt 73,5% (308/419) eine dokumentierte Schmerzreduktion vor. Bei 26,5% aller eingeschlossenen Fälle (111/419) lag nach den Kriterien des QI RS keine dokumentierte Schmerzreduktion vor. Unter jenen Fällen lag der Anteil der stationär Verstorbenen bei 64,0% (71/111). Es lag ein signifikanter Zusammenhang zwischen dem Fehlen einer dokumentierten Schmerzreduktion und dem Versterben vor (p<0,05).
73,4% (392/534) der Grundgesamtheit wurden für den QI OL T1 eingeschlossen, da eine Therapie mit Opioiden an T1 dokumentiert war. 75,8% (405/534) der Grundgesamtheit wurde für den QI OL T2 eingeschlossen, da eine Therapie mit Opioiden an T2 dokumentiert war. Aufgrund der Vollständigkeit der Routinedokumentation konnte die Auswertung des QI OL T1 bzw. des QI OL T2 bei allen eingeschlossenen Fällen vorgenommen werden: Am 3. Tag des stationären Aufenthalts lag der Anteil dokumentierter Laxantien bei Opioidtherapie mit 57,9% (227/392) etwas höher als am 3. Tag vor stationärer Entlassung mit 53,8% dokumentierter Laxantien bei Opioidtherapie (218/405). Unter den Fällen ohne Laxantien bei Opioidtherapie an T1 verstarben mit 58,8% (97/165) weniger als unter den Fällen ohne Laxantien bei Opioidtherapie an T2 mit 67,4% (126/187). Es zeigt sich sowohl für den QI OL T1 als auch für den QI OL T2 ein signifikanter Zusammenhang zwischen dem Fehlen dokumentierter Laxantien bei Opioidtherapie und dem Versterben (p<0,001).
Schlussfolgerung: Die vorliegende Studie belegt die Sinnhaftigkeit der Evaluation von Qualitätsindikatoren für die Palliativversorgung. Exemplarisch zeigt die Erhebung des Qualitätsindikators Opioide und Laxantien in der Sterbephase, dass regelmäßig von der Leitlinienempfehlung abgewichen wird. In der Erweiterten S3-LL Palliativ Langversion 2.0 von 2019 wurde der genaue Erhebungszeitpunkt des „QI2: Reduktion Schmerz“ präzisiert: Eingeschlossen für die Erhebung sind nun alle Patienten mit starkem bzw. mittleren Schmerz „bei stationärer Aufnahme“.
Simple Summary
Prostate cancer often relapses after initial radical prostatectomy, and salvage radiotherapy offers a second chance of cure for relapsed patients. Modern imaging techniques, especially prostate-specific membrane antigen positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PSMA PET/CT), enable radiation oncologists to target radiotherapy at the involved sites of disease. In a group of patients, PSMA PET/CT imaging can detect a macroscopic local recurrence with or without locoregional lymph node metastasis. In these cases, an escalation of the radiotherapy dose is often considered for controlling the visible tumor mass. As the evidence for dose-escalated salvage radiotherapy for macroscopic recurrent prostate cancer after PSMA PET/CT imaging is still limited, we address this topic in the current analysis. We found that the outcome of patients with dose-escalated salvage radiotherapy for macroscopic prostate cancer recurrence is encouragingly favorable, while the toxicity is very limited.
Abstract
Background: The purpose of this study was to access the oncological outcome of prostate-specific membrane antigen positron emission tomography (PSMA PET/CT)-guided salvage radiotherapy (SRT) for localized macroscopic prostate cancer recurrence. Methods: Between February 2010 and June 2021, 367 patients received SRT after radical prostatectomy. Out of the 367 screened patients, 111 patients were staged by PSMA PET/CT before SRT. A total of 59 out of these 111 (53.2%) patients were treated for PSMA PET-positive macroscopic prostatic fossa recurrence. Dose-escalated SRT was applied with a simultaneous integrated boost at a median prescribed dose of 69.3 Gy (IQR 69.3–72.6 Gy). The oncological outcome was investigated using Kaplan-Meier and Cox regression analyses. The genitourinary (GU)/gastrointestinal (GI) toxicity evaluation utilized Common Toxicity Criteria for Adverse Events (version 5.0). Results: The median follow-up was 38.2 months. The three-year biochemical progression-free survival rate was 89.1% (95% CI: 81.1–97.8%) and the three-year metastasis-free survival rate reached 96.2% (95% CI: 91.2–100.0%). The cumulative three-year late grade 3 GU toxicity rate was 3.4%. No late grade 3 GI toxicity occurred. Conclusions: Dose-escalated PSMA PET/CT-guided salvage radiotherapy for macroscopic prostatic fossa recurrence resulted in favorable survival and toxicity rates.
This retrospective, single-institutional study investigated long-term outcome, toxicity and health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in meningioma patients after radiotherapy. We analyzed the data of 119 patients who received radiotherapy at our department from 1997 to 2014 for intracranial WHO grade I-III meningioma. Fractionated stereotactic radiotherapy (FSRT), intensity modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) or radiosurgery radiation was applied. The EORTC QLQ-C30 and QLQ-BN20 questionnaires were completed for assessment of HRQoL. Overall survival (OS) for the entire study group was 89.6% at 5 years and 75.9% at 10 years. Local control (LC) at 5 and 10 years was 82.4% and 73.4%, respectively. Local recurrence was observed in 22 patients (18.5%). Higher grade acute and chronic toxicities were observed in seven patients (5.9%) and five patients (4.2%), respectively. Global health status was rated with a mean of 59.9 points (SD 22.3) on QLQ-C30. In conclusion, radiotherapy resulted in very good long-term survival and tumor control rates with low rates of severe toxicities but with a deterioration of long-term HRQoL.
Background
Despite advances in treatment of patients with non-small cell lung cancer, carriers of certain genetic alterations are prone to failure. One such factor frequently mutated, is the tumor suppressor PTEN. These tumors are supposed to be more resistant to radiation, chemo- and immunotherapy.
Results
We demonstrate that loss of PTEN led to altered expression of transcriptional programs which directly regulate therapy resistance, resulting in establishment of radiation resistance. While PTEN-deficient tumor cells were not dependent on DNA-PK for IR resistance nor activated ATR during IR, they showed a significant dependence for the DNA damage kinase ATM. Pharmacologic inhibition of ATM, via KU-60019 and AZD1390 at non-toxic doses, restored and even synergized with IR in PTEN-deficient human and murine NSCLC cells as well in a multicellular organotypic ex vivo tumor model.
Conclusion
PTEN tumors are addicted to ATM to detect and repair radiation induced DNA damage. This creates an exploitable bottleneck. At least in cellulo and ex vivo we show that low concentration of ATM inhibitor is able to synergise with IR to treat PTEN-deficient tumors in genetically well-defined IR resistant lung cancer models.
Differences in stem cell marker and osteopontin expression in primary and recurrent glioblastoma
(2022)
Background
Despite of a multimodal approach, recurrences can hardly be prevented in glioblastoma. This may be in part due to so called glioma stem cells. However, there is no established marker to identify these stem cells.
Methods
Paired samples from glioma patients were analyzed by immunohistochemistry for expression of the following stem cell markers: CD133, Musashi, Nanog, Nestin, octamer-binding transcription factor 4 (Oct4), and sex determining region Y-box 2 (Sox2). In addition, the expression of osteopontin (OPN) was investigated. The relative number of positively stained cells was determined. By means of Kaplan–Meier analysis, a possible association with overall survival by marker expression was investigated.
Results
Sixty tissue samples from 30 patients (17 male, 13 female) were available for analysis. For Nestin, Musashi and OPN a significant increase was seen. There was also an increase (not significant) for CD133 and Oct4. Patients with mutated Isocitrate Dehydrogenase-1/2 (IDH-1/2) status had a reduced expression for CD133 and Nestin in their recurrent tumors. Significant correlations were seen for CD133 and Nanog between OPN in the primary and recurrent tumor and between CD133 and Nestin in recurrent tumors. By confocal imaging we could demonstrate a co-expression of CD133 and Nestin within recurrent glioma cells. Patients with high CD133 expression had a worse prognosis (22.6 vs 41.1 months, p = 0.013). A similar trend was seen for elevated Nestin levels (24.9 vs 41.1 months, p = 0.08).
Conclusions
Most of the evaluated markers showed an increased expression in their recurrent tumor. CD133 and Nestin were associated with survival and are candidate markers for further clinical investigation.
Purpose: Any Linac will show geometric imprecisions, including non-ideal alignment of the gantry, collimator and couch axes, and gantry sag or wobble. Their angular dependence can be quantified and resulting changes of the dose distribution predicted (Wack, JACMP 20(5), 2020). We analyzed whether it is feasible to correct geometric shifts during treatment planning. The successful implementation of such a correction procedure was verified by measurements of different stereotactic treatment plans.
Methods: Isocentric shifts were quantified for two Elekta Synergy Agility Linacs using the QualiForMed ISO-CBCT+ module, yielding the shift between kV and MV isocenters, the gantry flex and wobble as well as the positions of couch and collimator rotation axes. Next, the position of each field's isocenter in the Pinnacle treatment planning system was adjusted accordingly using a script. Fifteen stereotactic treatment plans of cerebral metastases (0.34 to 26.53 cm3) comprising 9–11 beams were investigated; 54 gantry and couch combinations in total. Unmodified plans and corrected plans were measured using the Sun Nuclear SRS-MapCHECK with the Stereophan phantom and evaluated using gamma analysis.
Results: Geometric imprecisions, such as shifts of up to 0.8 mm between kV and MV isocenter, a couch rotation axis 0.9 mm off the kV isocente,r and gantry flex with an amplitude of 1.1 mm, were found. For eight, mostly small PTVs D98 values declined more than 5% by simulating these shifts. The average gamma (2%/2 mm, absolute, global, 20% threshold) was reduced from 0.53 to 0.31 (0.32 to 0.30) for Linac 1 (Linac 2) when including the isocentric corrections. Thus, Linac 1 reached the accuracy level of Linac 2 after correction.
Conclusion: Correcting for Linac geometric deviations during the planning process is feasible and was dosimetrically validated. The dosimetric impact of the geometric imperfections can vary between Linacs and should be assessed and corrected where necessary.
In locally advanced rectal cancer (LARC) neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy is regarded as standard treatment. We assessed acute toxicities in patients receiving conventional 3D-conformal radiotherapy (3D-RT) and correlated them with dosimetric parameters after re-planning with volumetric modulated arc therapy (VMAT). Patients were randomized within the multicenter CAO/ARO/AIO-12 trial and received 50.4 Gy in 28 fractions and simultaneous chemotherapy with fluorouracil and oxaliplatin. Organs at risk (OAR) were contoured in a standardized approach. Acute toxicities and dose volume histogram parameters of 3D-RT plans were compared to retrospectively calculated VMAT plans. From 08/2015 to 01/2018, 35 patients with LARC were treated at one study center. Thirty-four patients were analyzed of whom 1 (3%) was UICC stage II and 33 (97%) patients were UICC stage III. Grade 3 acute toxicities occurred in 5 patients (15%). Patients with acute grade 1 cystitis (n = 9) had significantly higher D\(_{mean}\) values for bladder (29.4 Gy vs. 25.2 Gy, p < 0.01) compared to patients without bladder toxicities. Acute diarrhea was associated with small bowel volume (grade 2: 870.1 ccm vs. grade 0–1: 647.3 ccm; p < 0.01) and with the irradiated volumes V5 to V50. Using VMAT planning, we could reduce mean doses and irradiated volumes for all OAR: D\(_{mean}\) bladder (21.9 Gy vs. 26.3 Gy, p < 0.01), small bowel volumes V5–V45 (p < 0.01), D\(_{mean}\) anal sphincter (34.6 Gy vs. 35.6 Gy, p < 0.01) and D\(_{mean}\) femoral heads (right 11.4 Gy vs. 25.9 Gy, left 12.5 Gy vs. 26.6 Gy, p < 0.01). Acute small bowel and bladder toxicities were dose and volume dependent. Dose and volume sparing for all OAR could be achieved through VMAT planning and might result in less acute toxicities.
Background: There is a lack of predictive models to identify patients at risk of high neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy (CRT)-related acute toxicity in rectal cancer. Patient and Methods: The CAO/ARO/AIO-04 trial was divided into a development (n = 831) and a validation (n = 405) cohort. Using a best subset selection approach, predictive models for grade 3–4 acute toxicity were calculated including clinicopathologic characteristics, pretreatment blood parameters, and baseline results of quality-of-life questionnaires and evaluated using the area under the ROC curve. The final model was internally and externally validated. Results: In the development cohort, 155 patients developed grade 3–4 toxicities due to CRT. In the final evaluation, 15 parameters were included in the logistic regression models using best-subset selection. BMI, gender, and emotional functioning remained significant for predicting toxicity, with a discrimination ability adjusted for overfitting of AUC 0.687. The odds of experiencing high-grade toxicity were 3.8 times higher in the intermediate and 6.4 times higher in the high-risk group (p < 0.001). Rates of toxicity (p = 0.001) and low treatment adherence (p = 0.007) remained significantly different in the validation cohort, whereas discrimination ability was not significantly worse (DeLong test 0.09). Conclusion: We developed and validated a predictive model for toxicity using gender, BMI, and emotional functioning. Such a model could help identify patients at risk for treatment-related high-grade toxicity to assist in treatment guidance and patient participation in shared decision making.
Simple Summary
Patients, who suffer from oligorecurrent prostate cancer with limited nodal involvement, may be offered positron emission tomography (PET)-directed salvage nodal radiotherapy to delay disease progression. This current analysis aimed to access salvage radiotherapy for nodal oligorecurrent prostate cancer with simultaneous integrated boost to PET-involved lymph nodes as metastasis-directed therapy. A long-term oncological outcome was favorable after salvage nodal radiotherapy and severe toxicity rates were low. Androgen deprivation therapy plays a major role in recurrent prostate cancer management and demonstrates a positive influence on the rate of biochemical progression in patients receiving salvage nodal radiotherapy. The present long-term analysis may help clinicians identify patients who would benefit from salvage nodal radiotherapy and androgen deprivation therapy, as a multimodal treatment strategy for oligorecurrent prostate cancer.
Abstract
Background: The study aimed to access the long-term outcome of salvage nodal radiotherapy (SNRT) in oligorecurrent prostate cancer. Methods: A total of 95 consecutive patients received SNRT for pelvic and/or extrapelvic nodal recurrence after prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) or choline PET from 2010 to 2021. SNRT was applied as external beam radiotherapy with simultaneous integrated boost up to a median total dose of 62.9 Gy (EQD2\(_{1.5Gy}\)) to the recurrent lymph node metastases. The outcome was analyzed by cumulative incidence functions with death as the competing risk. Fine–Gray regression analyses were performed to estimate the relative hazards of the outcome parameters. Genitourinary (GU)/gastrointestinal (GI) toxicity evaluation utilized Common Toxicity Criteria for Adverse Events (v5.0). The results are as follows: the median follow-up was 47.1 months. The five-year biochemical progression rate (95% CI) was 50.1% (35.7–62.9%). Concomitant androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) was adminstered in 60.0% of the patients. The five-year biochemical progression rate was 75.0% (42.0–90.9%) without ADT versus 35.3% (19.6–51.4%) with ADT (p = 0.003). The cumulative five-year late grade 3 GU toxicity rate was 2.1%. No late grade 3 GI toxicity occured. Conclusions: Metastasis-directed therapy through SNRT for PET-staged oligorecurrent prostate cancer demonstrated a favorable long-term oncologic outcome. Omittance of ADT led to an increased biochemical progression.
(1) Background: The recurrence of glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is mainly due to invasion of the surrounding brain tissue, where organic solutes, including glucose and inositol, are abundant. Invasive cell migration has been linked to the aberrant expression of transmembrane solute-linked carriers (SLC). Here, we explore the role of glucose (SLC5A1) and inositol transporters (SLC5A3) in GBM cell migration. (2) Methods: Using immunofluorescence microscopy, we visualized the subcellular localization of SLC5A1 and SLC5A3 in two highly motile human GBM cell lines. We also employed wound-healing assays to examine the effect of SLC inhibition on GBM cell migration and examined the chemotactic potential of inositol. (3) Results: While GBM cell migration was significantly increased by extracellular inositol and glucose, it was strongly impaired by SLC transporter inhibition. In the GBM cell monolayers, both SLCs were exclusively detected in the migrating cells at the monolayer edge. In single GBM cells, both transporters were primarily localized at the leading edge of the lamellipodium. Interestingly, in GBM cells migrating via blebbing, SLC5A1 and SLC5A3 were predominantly detected in nascent and mature blebs, respectively. (4) Conclusion: We provide several lines of evidence for the involvement of SLC5A1 and SLC5A3 in GBM cell migration, thereby complementing the migration-associated transportome. Our findings suggest that SLC inhibition is a promising approach to GBM treatment.
Purpose
Dose-escalated external beam radiation therapy (EBRT) and EBRT + high-dose-rate brachytherapy (HDR-BT) boost are guideline-recommended treatment options for localized prostate cancer. The purpose of this study was to compare long-term outcome and toxicity of dose-escalated EBRT versus EBRT + HDR-BT boost.
Methods
From 2002 to 2019, 744 consecutive patients received either EBRT or EBRT + HDR-BT boost, of whom 516 patients were propensity score matched. Median follow-up was 95.3 months. Cone beam CT image-guided EBRT consisted of 33 fractions of intensity-modulated radiation therapy with simultaneous integrated boost up to 76.23 Gy (D\(_{Mean}\)). Combined treatment was delivered as 46 Gy (D\(_{Mean}\)) EBRT, followed by two fractions HDR-BT boost with 9 Gy (D\(_{90\%}\)). Propensity score matching was applied before analysis of the primary endpoint, estimated 10-year biochemical relapse-free survival (bRFS), and the secondary endpoints metastasis-free survival (MFS) and overall survival (OS). Prognostic parameters were analyzed by Cox proportional hazard modelling. Genitourinary (GU)/gastrointestinal (GI) toxicity evaluation used the Common Toxicity Criteria for Adverse Events (v5.0).
Results
The estimated 10-year bRFS was 82.0% vs. 76.4% (p = 0.075) for EBRT alone versus combined treatment, respectively. The estimated 10-year MFS was 82.9% vs. 87.0% (p = 0.195) and the 10-year OS was 65.7% vs. 68.9% (p = 0.303), respectively. Cumulative 5‑year late GU ≥ grade 2 toxicities were seen in 23.6% vs. 19.2% (p = 0.086) and 5‑year late GI ≥ grade 2 toxicities in 11.1% vs. 5.0% of the patients (p = 0.002); cumulative 5‑year late grade 3 GU toxicity occurred in 4.2% vs. 3.6% (p = 0.401) and GI toxicity in 1.0% vs. 0.3% (p = 0.249), respectively.
Conclusion
Both treatment groups showed excellent long-term outcomes with low rates of severe toxicity.
Purpose
In Germany, Austria, and Switzerland, pretreatment radiotherapy quality control (RT-QC) for tumor bed boost (TB) in non-metastatic medulloblastoma (MB) was not mandatory but was recommended for patients enrolled in the SIOP PNET5 MB trial between 2014 and 2018. This individual case review (ICR) analysis aimed to evaluate types of deviations in the initial plan proposals and develop uniform review criteria for TB boost.
Patients and methods
A total of 78 patients were registered in this trial, of whom a subgroup of 65 patients were available for evaluation of the TB treatment plans. Dose uniformity was evaluated according to the definitions of the protocol. Additional RT-QC criteria for standardized review of target contours were elaborated and data evaluated accordingly.
Results
Of 65 initial TB plan proposals, 27 (41.5%) revealed deviations of target volume delineation. Deviations according to the dose uniformity criteria were present in 14 (21.5%) TB plans. In 25 (38.5%) cases a modification of the RT plan was recommended. Rejection of the TB plans was rather related to unacceptable target volume delineation than to insufficient dose uniformity.
Conclusion
In this analysis of pretreatment RT-QC, protocol deviations were present in a high proportion of initial TB plan proposals. These findings emphasize the importance of pretreatment RT-QC in clinical trials for MB. Based on these data, a proposal for RT-QC criteria for tumor bed boost in non-metastatic MB was developed.