Phase II trial of consolidative stereotactic body radiation therapy in patients with metastatic oncogene-driven non-small cell lung carcinoma treated with tyrosine kinase inhibitors.
Florence K Keane, Beow Y Yeap, Melin J Khandekar, Jessica J Lin, Ibiayi Dagogo-Jack, Lecia V Sequist, Zofia Piotrowska, Henning Willers
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: The role of stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) in the management of advanced EGFR/ALK/ROS1-driven non-small cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC) remains undefined. In EGFR-mutant NSCLC, 50-60% of recurrences on first-line tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) occur in originally involved sites and may lead to subsequent distant failures (DF). We sought to determine whether consolidative SBRT to residual sites reduces DF.
Patients and methods: This is a single-arm, phase II trial of SBRT to residual sites of disease in patients with metastatic oncogene-driven NSCLC with stable or responding disease to TKI within 12 months of treatment start. The primary endpoint was DF frequency at 12 months after SBRT.
Results: Median follow-up was 57.1 months. The trial enrolled 27 of 30 planned patients between 2015 - 2021, stopping early due to slow accrual. Most (n = 22) had EGFR driver mutations. The majority (59.5%) were treated with later-generation TKIs. Median time from TKI start to SBRT was 6.4 months. Twenty-five patients (92.6%) received SBRT to the residual lung primary only. The 12-month DF rate was 19% (95% CI, 7-36%). Median PFS from SBRT was 15.0 months (95% CI, 8.6-46.7). Two-year LF rate of irradiated sites was 11% (95% CI, 3-27%). Two-year and median OS were 88% (95% CI, 68-96%) and 59.6 months (95% CI, 42.3-NR), respectively. There were no grade ≥3 adverse events related to SBRT.
Conclusions: In patients treated with first-line TKIs, consolidative SBRT was associated with improvement in distant disease control compared with historical controls, supporting ongoing randomized trials.
期刊介绍:
International Journal of Radiation Oncology • Biology • Physics (IJROBP), known in the field as the Red Journal, publishes original laboratory and clinical investigations related to radiation oncology, radiation biology, medical physics, and both education and health policy as it relates to the field.
This journal has a particular interest in original contributions of the following types: prospective clinical trials, outcomes research, and large database interrogation. In addition, it seeks reports of high-impact innovations in single or combined modality treatment, tumor sensitization, normal tissue protection (including both precision avoidance and pharmacologic means), brachytherapy, particle irradiation, and cancer imaging. Technical advances related to dosimetry and conformal radiation treatment planning are of interest, as are basic science studies investigating tumor physiology and the molecular biology underlying cancer and normal tissue radiation response.