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R. Wanders



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    P1.08 - Poster Session 1 - Radiotherapy (ID 195)

    • Event: WCLC 2013
    • Type: Poster Session
    • Track: Radiation Oncology + Radiotherapy
    • Presentations: 1
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      P1.08-022 - Number of pathologic nodes in regions closest to the oesophagus is the strongest predictor for esophagitis in small cell lung cancer patients treated with concurrent chemo-radiation: an analysis of 170 patients. (ID 2711)

      09:30 - 16:30  |  Author(s): R. Wanders

      • Abstract

      Background
      Radiation esophagitis grade III caused by chemo-radiation for small-cell lung cancer is a burden for patients and thus of concern to radiation oncologists. Neutropenia and radiation dose to the esophagus are known treatment factors influencing the rate of esophagitis during treatment, but currently the only factors that can be discussed with the patient at diagnosis are the choice of concurrent versus sequential chemo-radiation and the radiation dose fractionation schedule. In order to build predictive models to more accurately tailor treatment and advise patients on treatment options, more prognostic factors known at the moment of diagnosis are needed.

      Methods
      Analysis of all patients in our prospective database with stage I-III SCLC referred for concurrent chemo-radiotherapy between 5-2004 and 1-2012. All patients were PET-staged and received 45 Gy in 1.5 Gy fractions twice daily to the tumour and PET-or pathologically proven positive lymph nodes. Chemotherapy consisted of carboplatin-etoposide given concurrently with radiotherapy. All pathological lymph node regions were noted for each patient. Based on the Mountain Dressler atlas, the lymph node regions closest to the oesophagus were designated ``high risk`` regions for esophagitis, namely: 1R, 1L, 3P, 4L, 7, 8 and 9. Toxicity was scored according to CTC AE 3.0. Univariate analysis was done using the Chi-square test, reporting for p-value the Fischer exact Test for small numbers of events. Multivariate analysis was done using logistic regression. .

      Results
      170 patients were included in the present analysis. Thirty-seven (20%) patients developed grade III esophagitis. In univariate analysis the number of nodal regions (0, 1-4, ≥5) (p=0.02) and the number of high risk nodal regions (0, 1-2, ≥3) (p=0.001) had a significant effect on the risk of grade III esophagitis whereas the location of the primary tumour or having a T4 tumour did not. In multivariate analysis including age, gender and T4 tumour, the number of pathological nodal stations lost significance. In the multivariate analysis using age, gender, T4 tumour and the ``high risk`` count (0, 1-2, ≥3 areas) having nodes in ≥3 high risk areas was the only significant factor (p=0.002), with a hazard ratio (HR) of 7.4 for developing oesophagitis grade III (95% CI for HR: 2.2-25.2). The absolute rates of esophagitis grade III were: 5/51 (10%), 19/91 (21%), 12/28 (43%) for patients with respectively 0, 1-2 and ≥3 pathological high risk nodal areas.

      Conclusion
      In this series of stage I-III small cell lung cancer treated with radical chemo-radiation, the strongest predictor for esophagitis grade III known at diagnosis is the presence of nodal disease in ``high-risk regions`` 1R, 1L, 3P, 4L, 7, 8 and 9. Analysis of the correlation of this finding with the dose to the esophagus (Dmax/ Dmean) is ongoing and will also be presented at the conference.