J John Lucido, Trey C Mullikin, W Scott Harmsen, Sydney D Pulsipher, Benjamin A Johnson-Tesch, Jonathan M Morris, Peter S Rose, Brittany L Siontis, Debra H Brinkmann, Dawn Owen, Sean S Park, Anne W Rajkumar, Roman O Kowalchuk, Kenneth W Merrell
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Long-Term Outcomes After Reirradiation With Spine Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy: Single-Institutional Retrospective Experience.
Reirradiation of spinal metastases using stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) presents clinical challenges, with limited patient outcomes data to guide decision-making. We report a retrospective, single-institutional experience of 107 lesions treated in 91 patients. Of these, 88 (72%) lesions were initially irradiated with conventional radiation therapy (median equivalent dose of 33 Gy to the target, IQR, 23-35 Gy) with a median time to reirradiation of 12 months (IQR, 4-21 months). For reirradiation, most lesions received either 1 fraction (18-24 Gy) or 3 fractions (30-36 Gy) of SBRT. The median equivalent dose in 2 Gy fractions was 38 Gy (IQR, 30-41 Gy), 27 Gy (22-36 Gy), and 65 (54-73 Gy) for previous courses, reirradiation, and cumulatively, respectively. At 1 year, overall survival was 61% with a cumulative incidence of local failure at 12% and vertebral compression fracture at 9% considering death as a competing risk. None of the 79 treated lesions at L1 or above developed radiation myelitis, but 5 patients developed chronic peripheral neuropathy. In our analysis, most adverse events or local failures occur within the 2 years after retreatment. These findings demonstrate the safety and effectiveness of spine reirradiation with SBRT.
期刊介绍:
The overarching mission of Practical Radiation Oncology is to improve the quality of radiation oncology practice. PRO''s purpose is to document the state of current practice, providing background for those in training and continuing education for practitioners, through discussion and illustration of new techniques, evaluation of current practices, and publication of case reports. PRO strives to provide its readers content that emphasizes knowledge "with a purpose." The content of PRO includes:
Original articles focusing on patient safety, quality measurement, or quality improvement initiatives
Original articles focusing on imaging, contouring, target delineation, simulation, treatment planning, immobilization, organ motion, and other practical issues
ASTRO guidelines, position papers, and consensus statements
Essays that highlight enriching personal experiences in caring for cancer patients and their families.