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Dose–volume parameters and local tumor control in cervical cancer treated with central-shielding external-beam radiotherapy and CT-based image-guided brachytherapy
Author(s) -
Shohei Okazaki,
Kazutoshi Murata,
Shinei Noda,
Yu Kumazaki,
Ryuta Hirai,
Mitsunobu Igari,
Takanori Abe,
S Komatsu,
Takashi Nakano,
Shingo Kato
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of radiation research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.643
H-Index - 60
eISSN - 1349-9157
pISSN - 0449-3060
DOI - 10.1093/jrr/rrz023
Subject(s) - brachytherapy , medicine , external beam radiotherapy , cervical cancer , nuclear medicine , radiation therapy , stage (stratigraphy) , rectum , radiation treatment planning , radiology , cancer , urology , surgery , paleontology , biology
Definitive radiotherapy for cervical cancer consists of external-beam radiotherapy (EBRT) and brachytherapy. In EBRT, a central shield (CS) reduces the dose to the rectum and bladder. The combination of whole-pelvic (WP)- and CS-EBRT and brachytherapy is the standard radiotherapy protocol in Japan. Despite clinical studies, including multi-institutional clinical trials, showing that the Japanese treatment protocol yields favorable treatment outcomes with low rates of late radiation toxicities, dose-volume parameters for the Japanese treatment protocol remain to be established. We conducted a retrospective dose-volume analysis of 103 patients with uterine cervical cancer treated with the Japanese protocol using computed tomography-based adaptive brachytherapy. The 2-year overall survival and 2-year local control rates according to FIGO stage were 100% and 100% for Stage I, 92% and 94% for Stage II, and 85% and 87% for Stage III-IV, respectively. Late adverse effects in the rectum and bladder were acceptable. Receiver operating characteristic analysis discriminated recurrence within the high-risk clinical target volume (HR-CTV) (n = 5) from no local recurrence (n = 96), with the optimal response obtained at a dose of 36.0 GyEQD2 for HR-CTV D90 and 28.0 GyEQD2 for HR-CTV D98. These values were used as cut-offs in Fisher exact tests to show that high HR-CTV D90 and HR-CTV D98 doses for brachytherapy sessions were significantly associated with tumor control within the HR-CTV. These data suggest a contribution of brachytherapy to local tumor control in WP- and CS-EBRT and brachytherapy combination treatment, warranting validation in multi-institutional prospective studies.

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