Esophageal Cancer

Springer Science and Business Media LLC - Tập 184 - Trang 15-22 - 2008
Thomas B. Brunner1, Andreas Rupp, Winfrid Melzner, Gerhard G. Grabenbauer, Rolf Sauer2
1Radiation Oncology and Biology, Churchill Hospital, University of Oxford, Headington, Oxford, UK
2Department of Radiation Therapy, Friedrich Alexander University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Erlangen

Tóm tắt

To present the results of a prospective phase II study in esophageal carcinoma. Patients received single doses of 1.8 Gy up to 27 Gy, then concomitant boost to a total of 50.4 Gy (PTV2 [planning target volume], single dose 1.8 Gy) and 64.8 Gy (PTV1, single dose 1.2 Gy in the morning and 1.8 Gy in the afternoon) concurrently with 800 mg/m2/d 5-fluorouracil and 20 mg/m2/d cisplatin (weeks 1 and 5). High-dose-rate brachytherapy (2–3 × 6 Gy) on Fridays of weeks 4–6 used a customized applicator facilitating central placement and circumferential dose homogeneity. 50 patients with squamous cell carcinoma (90%) or adenocarcinoma and mostly advanced tumor stage were treated (82% T3/T4 and 70% N1). Median overall survival (median OS 16 months; 1-year-OS 61%; 2-year OS 29%) was significantly longer for patients without nodal disease (35 vs. 11 months; p = 0.01). Hematotoxicity was grade 3 in 11/50, and grade 4 in 1/50 patients. Four percent of higher-grade nausea or vomiting occurred. Esophageal late toxicity was grade 3 in 9/50 patients, and grade 4 in 2/50 patients. Survival was excellent especially for patients without nodal disease in this dose-intensified schedule with acceptable tolerability.