O-64 Long term results in terms of neurotoxicity among patients with limited small cell lung cancer included in a trial evaluating prophylactic cranial irradiation

Lung Cancer ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 41 ◽  
pp. S21-S22 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cecile Le Pechoux ◽  
Agnes Laplanche ◽  
Francoise Borie ◽  
Michele Tarayre ◽  
Rodrigo Arriagada ◽  
...  
1990 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 209-214 ◽  
Author(s):  
J F Fleck ◽  
L H Einhorn ◽  
R C Lauer ◽  
S M Schultz ◽  
M E Miller

Although prophylactic cranial irradiation (PCI) is frequently used in the treatment of patients with limited-extent small-cell lung cancer (SCLC), its role remains controversial. One hundred fourteen SCLC patients with limited disease treated at Indiana University were retrospectively reviewed. Fifty-eight of 114 (51%) patients achieved a complete remission (CR) and were analyzed. Thirty-eight of these 58 CR patients received PCI (+PCI) and 20 of 58 CR patients did not receive PCI (-PCI). Twenty-six of 38 patients who received PCI subsequently relapsed. No patient initially relapsed in the CNS, although one patient had a brain metastasis following recurrence in the chest. Eleven of 38 patients who were treated with PCI survived for longer than 30 months and were considered long-term survivors. Seven of these 11 patients (63%) developed clinically significant neurological toxicity. Sixteen of 20 patients who did not receive PCI relapsed, but there was only one initial relapse in the CNS. Three additional patients who relapsed in the chest subsequently developed CNS metastasis. All responded to palliative radiation with improvement in their symptoms. The high incidence of CNS toxicity in the long-term survivors and the relatively infrequent incidence of isolated CNS recurrent in patients not subjected to PCI raise serious questions concerning the role, if any, of PCI in limited SCLC.


1999 ◽  
Vol 17 (9) ◽  
pp. 2700-2700 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Stuschke ◽  
W. Eberhardt ◽  
C. Pöttgen ◽  
G. Stamatis ◽  
H. Wilke ◽  
...  

PURPOSE: Relapse pattern and late toxicities in long-term survivors were analyzed after the introduction of prophylactic cranial irradiation (PCI) into a phase II trial on trimodality treatment of locally advanced (LAD) non–small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC). PATIENTS AND METHODS: Seventy-five patients with stage IIIA(N2)/IIIB NSCLC were treated with induction chemotherapy, preoperative radiochemotherapy, and surgery. PCI was routinely offered during the second period of study accrual. Patients were given a total radiation dose of 30 Gy (2 Gy per daily fraction) over a 3-week period starting 1 day after the last chemotherapy cycle. RESULTS: Introduction of PCI reduced the rate of brain metastases as first site of relapse from 30% to 8% at 4 years (P = .005) and that of overall brain relapse from 54% to 13% (P < .0001). The effect of PCI was also observed in the good-prognosis subgroup of 47 patients who had a partial response or complete response to induction chemotherapy, with a reduction of brain relapse as first failure from 23% to 0% at 4 years (P = .01). Neuropsychologic testing revealed impairments in attention and visual memory in long-term survivors who received PCI as well as in those who did not receive PCI. T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging revealed white matter abnormalities of higher grades in patients who received PCI than in those who did not. CONCLUSION: PCI at a moderate dose reduced brain metastases in LAD-NSCLC to a clinically significant extent, comparable to that in limited-disease small-cell lung cancer. Late toxicity to normal brain was acceptable. This study supports the use of PCI within intense protocols for LAD-NSCLC, particularly in patients with favorable prognostic factors.


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