Tuesday, March 21, 2017

No need to go through 38-44 treatments with IMRT anymore

There have been several hypofractionation trials maturing in the last couple of years. With minor exception, they all tell the same story: external beam radiation therapy (EBRT) can be completed in less time without loss of efficacy or increase in toxicity. Hypofractionation means completing EBRT in fewer treatments or fractions using higher doses per fraction.

Catton et al. now report the 5-year outcomes of a multi-institutional, multinational (27 centers in Canada, Australia and France) randomized clinical trial (called the “PROFIT” trial) among 1,206 intermediate-risk patients treated from 2006 to 2011. All patients received radiation doses now considered curative: 78 Gy in 39 fractions (conventional fractionation - CFN) or 60 Gy in 20 fractions (hypofractionation - HFN). The doses are biologically equivalent for cancer control, no ADT was allowed. After median follow-up of 6.0 years:

  • 5-year freedom from biochemical or clinical failure was 85% in both groups
  • Acute urinary toxicity, grade 2: 27% in both groups; grade 3:4% in both groups 
  • Acute rectal toxicity, grade 2: 16% for HFN*, 10% for CFN; grade 3: <1% in both groups 
  • Late term urinary toxicity, grade 2: 20% for HFN, 19% for CFN; grade 3+:2% for HFN, 3% for CFN Late term rectal toxicity, grade 2: 7% for HFN, 11% for CFN*; grade 3+: 1% for HFN, 3% for CFN 
*Difference between arms was statistically significant, but not meaningful

The table below summarizes the key oncological and late-term toxicity outcomes of the various hypofractionation trials:

Randomized Clinical Trial
Risk Groups
Fractionation
5-yr bPFS
Urinary toxicity
Grade 2+
Rectal toxicity
Grade 2+
Ref.
PROFIT
100% intermediate
60 Gy/20fx
78 Gy/39fx
85%
85%
22%
21%
8%
14%
1
Fox Chase
67% Intermediate, 33% high
70.2 Gy/26fx
76 Gy/38fx
77%
79%
22%
13%
18%
23%
2
CHHiP
73% intermediate, 15% low, 12% high
60 Gy/20fx
74 Gy/37fx
91%
88%
12%
9%
12%
14%
3
MD Anderson
71% intermediate, 28% low, 1% high
72 Gy/30fx
75.6 Gy/42fx
96%
92%
16%
17%
10%
5%
4
RTOG 0415
100% low risk
70 Gy/28fx
73.8 Gy/41fx
94%
92%
30%
23%
22%
14%
5
HYPRO
>70% high, <30% intermediate
64.6 Gy/19fx
78 Gy/39fx
81%
77%
41%
39%
22%
18%
6, 7
Cleveland Clinic
49% low, 51% intermediate
70 Gy/28fx
78 Gy/39fx
94%
88%
1%
2%
5%
12%
8

Hypofractionation has demonstrated equal efficacy and side effects compared to conventional fractionation. Hypofractionation requires greater care on the part of the radiation oncologist. He must use advanced image guidance with placement of fiducials or radio transponders and localization with cone beam CT, set tighter margins, lower dose constraints for organs at risk, assure adequate bladder filling and lack of bowel distension at each treatment, use fused MRI/CT images if possible, and have very rapid linacs to minimize intrafractional motion. With this much cumulative level 1 evidence, it is hard to justify the use of conventionally fractionated EBRT anymore. Patients should not have to endure 38 or more treatments, and pay the extra cost of that, even if insurance or Medicare is willing to pay. Patients should shop for radiation oncologists who have experience with hypofractionation, or preferably, with extreme hypofractionation (SBRT).

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