Concurrent chemoradiation in anal cancer patients delivered with bone marrow-sparing imrt: Final results of a prospective phase ii trial

Francesca Arcadipane, Patrick Silvetti, Francesco Olivero, Alessio Gastino, Roberta Carlevato, Ilaria Chiovatero, Lavinia Spinelli, Massimiliano Mistrangelo, Paola Cassoni, Giuliana Ritorto, Elena Gallio, Adriana Lesca, Riccardo Faletti, Francesca Romana Giglioli, Christian Fiandra, Umberto Ricardi, Pierfrancesco Franco

Risultato della ricerca: Contributo su rivistaArticolo in rivistapeer review

Abstract

We investigated the role of the selective avoidance of haematopoietically active pelvic bone marrow (BM), with a targeted intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) approach, to reduce acute hematologic toxicity (HT) in anal cancer patients undergoing concurrent chemo-radiation. We designed a one-armed two-stage Simon’s design study to test the hypothesis that BM-sparing IMRT would improve by 20% the rate of G0–G2 (vs. G3–G4) HT, from 42% of RTOG 0529 historical data to 62% (α = 0.05; β = 0.20). A minimum of 21/39 (54%) with G0–G2 toxicity represented the threshold for the fulfilment of the criteria to define this approach as ‘promising’. We employed18 FDG-PET to identify active BM within the pelvis. Acute HT was assessed via weekly blood counts and scored as per the Common Toxicity Criteria for Adverse Effects version 4.0. From December 2017 to October 2020, we enrolled 39 patients. Maximum observed acute HT comprised 20% rate of ≥G3 leukopenia and 11% rate of ≥G3 thrombocytopenia. Overall, 11 out of 39 treated patients (28%) experienced ≥G3 acute HT. Conversely, in 28 patients (72%) G0–G2 HT events were observed, above the threshold set. Hence,18 FDG-PET-guided BM-sparing IMRT was able to reduce acute HT in this clinical setting.

Lingua originaleInglese
Numero di articolo427
RivistaJournal of Personalized Medicine
Volume11
Numero di pubblicazione5
DOI
Stato di pubblicazionePubblicato - mag 2021
Pubblicato esternamente

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