< Radiation Oncology < Cervix

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Radiotherapy technique


Overall treatment time

  • Total treatment time (EBRT + brachy) should not exceed 8 weeks; target 85 Gy to Point A. However, concurrent chemotherapy may negate this time effect


  • University of Wisconsin; 2013 PMID 23561652 -- "Effects of treatment duration during concomitant chemoradiation therapy for cervical cancer." (Shaverdian N, Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys. 2013 Jul 1;86(3):562-8. doi: 10.1016/j.ijrobp.2013.01.037. Epub 2013 Apr 2.)
    • Retrospective. 372 patients (RT 206, CRT 166). Median F/U 4.2 years
    • Outcome: Treatment duration RT 55 days versus CRT 51 days (SS). In RT cohort, treatment duration 62 days trended to worse DFS (HR 1.4, p=0.08). No difference for treatment duration in CRT cohort
    • Conclusion: With addition of concomitant chemotherapy, extended TD has no effect on treatment efficacy
  • Washington University; 1995 (1959-89) PMID 7635767, 1995 -- "Carcinoma of the uterine cervix. I. Impact of prolongation of overall treatment time and timing of brachytherapy on outcome of radiation therapy." Perez CA et al. Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys. 1995 Jul 30;32(5):1275-88.
    • Usual treatment including EBRT and 2 intracavitary insertions lasts 42-48 days (less than 7 weeks). For Stage IB, the cause specific survival was 86% for 7 weeks or less, 78% (7-9 weeks), and 55% (>9wks). For IIA, 73% / 41% / 43%. For Stage III (and dose >=85), 46% for <9 wks vs 38% for longer. No effect of treatment time for Stage IB tumors < 3 cm (IB1).
  • Patterns of Care; 1993 (1973-1978) PMID 8436516, 1993 -- "The influence of treatment time on outcome for squamous cell cancer of the uterine cervix treated with radiation: a patterns-of-care study." (Lanciano RM, Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys. 1993 Feb 15;25(3):391-7.)
    • Retrospective. 837 patients. Time bins <6 weeks, 6-8, 8-10, >10 weeks
    • Multivariate for in-field recurrence: stage, total treatment time, age (50)
    • Stage III cancers: total treatment time independent predictor; not in Stage I-II
    • Conclusion: Significant adverse effect in Stage III patients
  • Gustave-Roussy; 1993 (France)(1973-1983) PMID 8262826 -- "Overall treatment time in advanced cervical carcinomas: a critical parameter in treatment outcome." Girinksy T et al.
    • Retrospective. 386 patients. Stage IIB and III. Loss of local control and overall survival when treatment extended beyond 52 days. 1% loss of LC and OS per day.
  • Princess Margaret; 1992 PMID 1480773 -- "The effect of treatment duration in the local control of cervix cancer." (Fyles A, Radiother Oncol. 1992 Dec;25(4):273-9.)
    • Retrospective. 830 patients.
    • Loss of control: 1% per day beyond 30 days, predominately in Stage III/IV

Classic pelvic fields

  • Fox Chase; 1996 PMID 12118547 "Bony landmarks are not an adequate substitute for lymphangiography in defining pelvic lymph node location for the treatment of cervical cancer with radiotherapy." Bonin SR et al. Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys. 1996 Jan 1;34(1):167-72.
    • Used lymphangiograms to determine the adequacy of lymph node coverage by standard GOG pelvic fields.
    • Great variability in lymph node location. Bony landmarks are a poor substitute for lymph node location. Poor coverage of lateral external iliac lymph nodes.

Target Volume Delineation

  • Gyn IMRT Consortium: Definitive Treatment; 2011 PMID 20472347 -- "Consensus guidelines for delineation of clinical target volume for intensity-modulated pelvic radiotherapy for the definitive treatment of cervix cancer." (Lim K, Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys. 2011 Feb 1;79(2):348-55. Epub 2010 May 14.)
    • Guidelines for CTV definition in definitive therapy setting
  • Gyn IMRT Consortium: Postoperative Treatment; 2008 PMID 18037584 -- "Consensus guidelines for delineation of clinical target volume for intensity-modulated pelvic radiotherapy in postoperative treatment of endometrial and cervical cancer." (Small W, Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys. 2008 Jun 1;71(2):428-34. Epub 2007 Nov 26.)
    • Guidelines for CTV definition in postoperative therapy setting
    • RTOG Atlas

Parametrial Boost

  • Batticoloa, Sri Lanka; 2012 PMID 23027037 -- "Reviewing the role of parametrial boost in patients with cervical cancer with clinically involved parametria and staged with positron emission tomography." (Rajasooriyar C, Int J Gynecol Cancer. 2012 Nov;22(9):1532-7. doi: 10.1097/IGC.0b013e31826c4dee.)
    • Retrospective. 193 patients, locoregionally advanced cervical cancer. Whole pelvis 40 Gy, PET positive nodes boosted to 46-50 Gy, no parametrial boost. Group A (IB-IIA) versus Group B (IIB-IIIB)
    • Outcome: No difference in pelvic failure or extrapelvic failure between Group A and Group B. Pelvic failure predicted by tumor volume, extrapelvic failure predicted by nodal disease. Parametrial involvement with no parametrial boost not related to either pelvic or extra-pelvic failure. No isolated pelvic nodal failures
    • Conclusion: Cervical cancer with clinical parametrial involvement can be adequately treated without parametrial boost. Dose 46-50 Gy adequate to avoid isolated pelvic nodal failure

Para-aortic Lymph Nodes

  • UC San Diego; 2013 (2003-2010) PMID 23262521 -- "Outcomes for patients with cervical cancer treated with extended-field intensity-modulated radiation therapy and concurrent cisplatin." (Jensen LG, Int J Gynecol Cancer. 2013 Jan;23(1):119-25. doi: 10.1097/IGC.0b013e3182749114.)
    • Retrospective. 21 patients. treated with EFRT IMRT and concurrent weekly cisplatin. Positive PA nodes in 14, positive pelvic nodes in 20. Median F/U 22 months
    • Outcome: 18 month OS 60%, DFSS 43%. LR 9%, DM 43%.
    • Toxicity: Grade 3+ GU 5% and GI 0%
    • Conclusion: Low rates of late toxicity; high rates of distant failure
  • Shadong University, China; 2012 PMID 22854654 -- "Extended-field intensity-modulated radiotherapy and concurrent cisplatin-based chemotherapy for postoperative cervical cancer with common iliac or para-aortic lymph node metastases: a retrospective review in a single institution." (Zhang G, Int J Gynecol Cancer. 2012 Sep;22(7):1220-5. doi: 10.1097/IGC.0b013e3182643b7c.)
    • Retrospective. 58 patients, EF-IMRT and concurrent cisplatin. Median F/U 2.8 years
    • Outcome: in-field recurrence 3.4%, distant recurrence 31%
    • Toxicity: Late grade 3 toxicity 5%; 77% of patients with ovarian transposition maintained ovarian function
    • Conclusion: Concurrent cisplatin with postoperative ER-IMRT is safe; locoregional control rates are hopeful, but distant metastases the primary mode of failure

Dose

  • Patterns of Care Study, 1991 - PMID 2004942
    • Dose response demonstrated only for Stage III with improved conrol with Pt A dose of 85 Gy.

Circadian variation

  • Lucknow, India -- morning RT vs evening RT
    • Randomized. 229 patients, cervical CA. Arm 1) morning (8-10 AM) vs Arm 2) evening (6-8 PM) RT. Primary outcome mucositis
    • 2010 PMID 20162717 -- "Circadian variation in radiation-induced intestinal mucositis in patients with cervical carcinoma." (Shukla P, Cancer. 2010 Feb 16. [Epub ahead of print])
      • Outcome: Overall diarrhea AM 87% vs PM 68% (SS), Grade 3-4 diarrhea 14% vs 5% (SS)
      • Conclusion: Significant difference between morning and evening arms suggest influence of circadian rhythms

Brachytherapy

  • Image-guided brachytherapy working group
    • 2004 PMID 15519788 "Proposed guidelines for image-based intracavitary brachytherapy for cervical carcinoma: Report from Image-Guided Brachytherapy Working Group." Nag et al. Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys. 2004 Nov 15;60(4):1160-72.
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