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Cancer-specific dose and fractionation schedules in stereotactic body radiotherapy for oligometastatic disease: An interim analysis of the EORTC-ESTRO E2-RADIatE OligoCare study

Sebastian M. Christ, Filippo Alongi, Umberto Ricardi, Marta Scorsetti, Lorenzo Livi, Panagiotis Balermpas, Yolande Lievens, Pètra M. Braam, Barbara Alicja Jereczek‐Fossa, Karin Stellamans, Ivica Ratoša, Joachim Widder, Heike Peulen, Piet Dirix, Samuel Bral, Sara Ramella, Hossein Hemmatazad, K. Khanfir, Xavier Geets, Paul M. Jeene, Thomas Zilli, Béatrice Fournier, Gilles Ivaldi, E. Clementel, Catherine Fortpied, Felix Boakye Oppong, Piet Ost, Matthias Gückenberger

2024Radiotherapy and Oncology26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND INTRODUCTION: Optimal dose and fractionation in stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) for oligometastatic cancer patients remain unknown. In this interim analysis of OligoCare, we analyzed factors associated with SBRT dose and fractionation. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Analysis was based on the first 1,099 registered patients. SBRT doses were converted to biological effective doses (BED) using α/β of 10 Gy for all primaries, and cancer-specific α/β of 10 Gy for non-small cell lung and colorectal cancer (NSCLC, CRC), 2.5 Gy for breast cancer (BC), or 1.5 Gy for prostate cancer (PC). RESULTS: Of the interim analysis population of 1,099 patients, 999 (99.5 %) fulfilled inclusion criteria and received metastasis-directed SBRT for NSCLC (n = 195; 19.5 %), BC (n = 163; 16.3 %), CRC (n = 184; 18.4 %), or PC (n = 457; 47.5 %). Two thirds of patients were treated for single metastasis. Median number of fractions was 5 (IQR, 3-5) and median dose per fraction was 9.7 (IQR, 7.7-12.4) Gy. The most frequently treated sites were non-vertebral bone (22.8 %), lung (21.0 %), and distant lymph node metastases (19.0 %). On multivariate analysis, the dose varied significantly for primary cancer type (BC: 237.3 Gy BED, PC 300.6 Gy BED, and CRC 84.3 Gy BED), and metastatic sites, with higher doses for lung and liver lesions. CONCLUSION: This real-world analysis suggests that SBRT doses are adjusted to the primary cancers and oligometastasis location. Future analysis will address safety and efficacy of this site- and disease-adapted SBRT fractionation approach (NCT03818503).

Topics & Concepts

MedicineLung cancerInterim analysisProstate cancerCancerColorectal cancerBreast cancerDose fractionationPopulationRadiosurgeryMetastasisRadiation therapyNuclear medicineOncologyInternal medicineRadiologyClinical trialEnvironmental healthAdvanced Radiotherapy TechniquesBreast Cancer Treatment StudiesLung Cancer Diagnosis and Treatment
Cancer-specific dose and fractionation schedules in stereotactic body radiotherapy for oligometastatic disease: An interim analysis of the EORTC-ESTRO E2-RADIatE OligoCare study | Litcius