Adaptive radiotherapy for virally mediated head and neck cancer


Autoria(s): Brown, Elizabeth; Porceddu, Sandro; Owen, Rebecca; Harden, Fiona
Data(s)

13/10/2012

Resumo

Purpose: Virally mediated head and neck cancers (VMHNC) often present with nodal involvement, and are generally considered radioresponsive, resulting in the need for a re-planning CT during radiotherapy (RT) in a subset of patients. We sought to identify a high-risk group based on nodal size to be evaluated in a future prospective adaptive RT trial. Methodology: Between 2005-2010, 121 patients with virally-mediated, node positive nasopharyngeal (EBV positive) or oropharyngeal (HPV positive) cancers, receiving curative intent RT were reviewed. Patients were analysed based on maximum size of the dominant node with a view to grouping them in varying risk categories for the need of re-planning. The frequency and timing of the re-planning scans were also evaluated. Results: Sixteen nasopharyngeal and 105 oropharyngeal tumours were reviewed. Twenty-five (21%) patients underwent a re-planning CT at a median of 22 (range, 0-29) fractions with 1 patient requiring re-planning prior to the commencement of treatment. Based on the analysis, patients were subsequently placed into 3 groups; ≤35mm (Group 1), 36-45mm (Group 2), ≥46mm (Group 3). Re-planning CT’s were performed in Group 1- 8/68 (11.8%), Group 2- 4/28 (14.3%), Group 3- 13/25 (52%). Sample size did not allow statistical analysis to detect a significant difference or exclusion of a lack of difference between the 3 groups. Conclusion: In this series, patients with VMHNC and nodal size > 46mm appear to be a high-risk group for the need of re-planning during a course of definitive radiotherapy. This finding will now be tested in a prospective adaptive RT study.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/57276/

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/57276/1/QLD_RT_weekend_2012_presentation.pdf

Brown, Elizabeth, Porceddu, Sandro, Owen, Rebecca, & Harden, Fiona (2012) Adaptive radiotherapy for virally mediated head and neck cancer. In AIR Queensland Radiation Therapy Weekend Conference, 13 October 2012, Seaworld Resort & Water Park, Gold Coast, QLD. (Unpublished)

Direitos

Copyright 2012 The Authors

Fonte

School of Clinical Sciences; Faculty of Health; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation

Palavras-Chave #110399 Clinical Sciences not elsewhere classified #Radiation Therapy #Head and neck cancer #Virus
Tipo

Conference Item