Adjuvant Postoperative Radiotherapy in Locally Advanced Rectal and Rectosigmoidal Cancer

1980 ◽  
Vol 66 (5) ◽  
pp. 595-600 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roberto Zucali ◽  
Gianstefano Cardani ◽  
Fabio Volterrani

A pelvic recurrence is the cause of death in about 1/3 of radically operated patients for rectal and rectosigmoidal cancer without clinical evidence of distant metastases. Preoperative and postoperative radiotherapy are largely used to reduce the incidence of locoregional relapses and to improve disease-free and overall survival and quality of life. Benefits from radiotherapy have been widely demonstrated, and adjuvant postoperative radiotherapy is at present strongly recommended. Twenty-one patients with locally advanced (stage B2, B3, C) rectal (11 cases) and rectosigmoidal cancer (10 cases) were treated with postoperative radiotherapy at the National Cancer Institute of Milan from 1975 to 1978. The pelvis received a median dose of 4500 rad (range, 4000–5200 rad) in 5 to 7 weeks through AP, PA opposed fields; 6 patients received a boost of 1000 rad on the perineum. Median follow-up after surgery is 83 months (range, 24–63 months). Only 1 case (« 5%) had a pelvic recurrence, at the perineum. The expected recurrence rate after surgery alone is 40 %, and our favorable results after postoperative radiotherapy are comparable with recent data from other institutions. Radiotherapy side effects were moderate and transient; no late damages to small bowel were observed.

2009 ◽  
Vol 27 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. e17053-e17053 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Sharma ◽  
D. Kumar ◽  
S. Kaur ◽  
P. Kalsotra ◽  
A. Gupta

e17053 Background: Chemotherapy is added to radiotherapy in the treatment of nasopharyngeal carcinoma with advanced locoregional disease to enhance therapeutic gain. Thirty percent patients with locally advanced nasopharyngeal carcinoma (LA-NPC) still die of distant metastases despite concurrent chemoradiation being the standard of care. In this retrospective study we performed the pooled analysis of these patients to assess the impact of neoadjuvant chemotherapy versus the concurrent chemoradiation approach. Methods: Between January 2000 and December 2007, 45 patients of stage IIB- IVB nasopharyngeal were treated with 3 cycles of induction chemotherapy with cisplatin and 5FU (n = 23) followed by conventional radical radiotherapy, or concurrent chemoradiation with weekly cisplatin (n = 22). Results: Total numbers of patients eligible for analyses were 45. Median age of the patients was 52 years (range 19–76 years). Median follow up was 17 months (range 6–60 months). At the time of last follow up, 13 patients (out of 23, i.e. 56.53%) were alive and disease free in the neoadjuvant group and 13 patients (out of 22, i.e. 59.1%) were alive and disease free in the concurrent chemoradiation group. The 2-year failure free survival in the concurrent chemoradiation arm was 63% versus 35% in the neoadjuvant arm (p = 0.197). Survival analyses adjusted for the gender male revealed 2-year failure free survival as 81% in the concurrent chemoradiation versus 44% in the neoadjuvant chemotherapy group among male patients (p = 0.0143). On multivariate analysis age and stage were the two significant predictive factors for failure free survival. Conclusions: The neoadjuvant chemotherapy seems to be at least as effective as concurrent chemoradiation in this small cohort of patients. No significant financial relationships to disclose.


1997 ◽  
Vol 83 (5) ◽  
pp. 856-861 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrea Brunori ◽  
Alberto Delitala ◽  
Giuseppina Oddi ◽  
Francesco Chiappetta

Although the histogenesis of meningeal hemangiopericytomas (HMP) remains controversial, both biological and clinical evidence seems to identify these neoplasms as a separate entity with respect to meningiomas. In order to assess the current prognosis of HMP we reviewed our personal experience limited to the last decade (1986-1995): during this period 7 patients (4M, 3F) were treated by surgery alone or surgery combined with postoperative radiotherapy. In spite of meticulous attempts at radical resection, the tumors recurred in all but two cases with a mean interval of 85 months, and a total of 18 operations were performed (2.57/patient; range 1-4). Massive intratumoral hemorrhage determined acute deterioration and required emergency surgery in two cases while in one patient diffuse visceral metastases were discovered at autopsy. Five patients are still alive at follow-up but only 2 of them are in good neurological conditions and without evidence of disease. These results are similar to those reported in other series. In view of our results we conclude that intracranial hemangiopericytomas still have a dismal prognosis. Advances in neuroimaging, neuroanesthesia, microneurosurgery and adjuvant therapy do not seem to have significantly affected the recurrence rate, quality of life and mortality.


1985 ◽  
Vol 3 (10) ◽  
pp. 1333-1338 ◽  
Author(s):  
S R Smalley ◽  
R G Evans ◽  
R L Richardson ◽  
G M Farrow ◽  
J D Earle

Sixteen consecutive patients with bulky stage II seminoma were treated with primary radiotherapy from 1971 to 1982. Bulky stage II seminoma was defined as either Union Internationale Contre le Cancer (UICC) stage IIC (retroperitoneal metastases greater than 5 cm) or IID (palpable retroperitoneal metastases) with no evidence of visceral or supradiaphragmatic disease. The median age was 38 years (range, 26 to 52) and the median size of retroperitoneal disease was 11.5 cm (range, 5 to 25 cm). Patients were treated with generous radiation ports (such as wide hockey-stick or whole abdomen) often followed by boosts to the sites of bulky disease. Median tumor dose was 3,235 cGy (range, 2,700 to 5,668 cGy). Mediastinal (with or without supraclavicular) prophylactic radiation was administered to 15 of the 16 patients with a median dose of 2,590 cGy (range, 1,200 to 3,700 cGy). Treatment toxicity was mild. All 16 patients achieved a complete remission (CR) with radiotherapy. Median follow-up from the time of diagnosis was 60 months, and all patients are currently disease-free. Two patients recurred after therapy but were rendered disease-free with further radiation. These two relapsing patients have remained disease-free, following initial recurrence, for 8 years. The excellent results obtained with modern imaging and radiotherapeutic techniques justify radiotherapy as the initial treatment of choice for bulky stage II seminomas.


Cartilage ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. 194760352094636
Author(s):  
Yoshiharu Shimozono ◽  
John F. Dankert ◽  
John G. Kennedy

Objective To evaluate the effect of intra-articular injection of autologous micronized adipose tissue (MAT) with ankle arthroscopic debridement in patients with advanced-stage posttraumatic osteoarthritis (PTOA) of ankle. Design A retrospective cohort study investigating patients treated with arthroscopic debridement and autologous MAT injection for ankle PTOA was performed. Patients with Kellgren-Lawrence (KL) grade 3 to 4 were included. Visual analogue scale (VAS), Foot and Ankle Outcome Scores (FAOS), and patient satisfaction were evaluated. Results A total of 19 patients (19 ankles) were included (KL grade 3, 8 patients; grade 4, 11 patients). At a mean follow-up time of 14.3 months (range, 7-23 months), the mean FAOS subscales for pain and quality of life significantly increased from 48.8 and 20.1 preoperatively to 61.1 and 30.1 ( P = 0.029 and 0.048, respectively). The mean VAS score significantly improved from 6.1 to 3.8 (P = 0.003) at final follow-up. A total of 10.5% (2/19) of patients were very satisfied, 31.6% (6/19) satisfied, 26.3% (5/19) neutral, 21.1% (4/19) unsatisfied, and 10.5% (2/19) very unsatisfied with their outcomes. The overall FAOS score demonstrated a significant difference in pre- to postoperative change with 14.8 for KL grade 3 and 5.9 for KL grade 4 ( P = 0.048). Conclusions Autologous MAT injection is a safe and potentially beneficial procedure for advanced-stage ankle PTOA as an adjunct to arthroscopic debridement, although more than one-third of patients were unsatisfied with the procedure. This procedure may be more beneficial for KL grade 3 patients than grade 4 patients. However, future investigations are necessary to define the role of MAT for ankle PTOA.


Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 1563-1563 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrea Gallamini ◽  
Monia Marchetti ◽  
Anna Borra ◽  
Roberto Sorasio ◽  
Francesca Fiore

Abstract Abstract 1563 Background: ABVD chemotherapy (AT) is the standard treatment for patients with advanced-stage Hodgkin lymphoma (HL). However, BEACOPP achieves a higher disease control at a cost of a definitely higher toxicity. Positron emission tomography (PET) after two chemotherapy cycles (PET2) is the most reliable predictor of treatment outcome in ABVD-treated patients. A PET-2 response-adapted strategy with a therapy shift from ABVD to BEACOPP in PET2 positive patients (A/B-T) was shown to increase the 2-y Failure Free Survival (FFS) in the latter from 12% to 62% by indirect retrospective comparison, and to improve the disease control in the overall patient population (Gallamini Br. J. Haematol 2011). However, PET is an expensive test which deserves a careful economic assessment before widespread adoption and reimbursement. Methods: We built a Markov decision model comparing A/B-T with AT strategies for advanced HL. The model was calibrated on the reported retrospective cohort of 154 ABVD-treated HL patients in which treatment intensification with BEACOPP was given in PET-2 positive patients. Briefly, patients were treated with standard ABVD × 2 courses and an interim-PET performed afterwards: PET-2 negative patients continued with ABVD × 4 and consolidation RxT in presence of bulky disease; PET-2 positive patients shifted to BEACOPP escalated × 4 + BEACOPP baseline × 4. Patients failing either AT or A/B-T underwent rescue treatment with IGEV × 4, followed by Autologous Stem Cell Transplantation (ASCT). In patients failing ASCT, DHAP reinduction therapy was given and allogeneic SCT (alloSCT) was performed whenever possible. The model included 12 health-states: ABVD cycles 1–2, ABVD cycles 3–6, BEACOPP escalated (4 cycles), BEACOPP baseline (4 cycles), IGEV (4 cycles), ASCT, DHAP + allogeneic SCT, follow-up (FFS patients PET2 negative), follow-up (FFS patients PET2 positive), follow-up (FFS after ASCT/CST), relapse, death. Each health state last 1 month and the overall time horizon at baseline was 5 years. We considered severe toxicity needing inpatient care and transplant-related mortality. Quality of life was reduced by 20% for chemotherapy-treated patients, 30% for transplanted ones and 40% in relapsed ones. The model assessed the following endpoints: survival, quality of life – adjusted survival (QALY) and costs (in the perspective of the health-care system) as the principal end-points. TreeAge SW (2008) was run. National charges were used as estimators of unitary costs. First and second-order sensitivity analysis was performed. Results: A/B-T reduced the overall percentage of patients failing treatment (refractory and relapsing) from 27% to 14%. This clinical advantage induced a prolongation of quality-adjusted survival from 53.20 to 55.63 quality-adjusted months, that is a gain of 0.18 QALYs (90% CI: −0.1;+1.4). The number of interim PET needed to avoid one ASCT was 8.3. The cost of universal interim PET (€1,546) was offset by the reduced number of ASCT procedures (€36,575). Consequently, health-care costs were €27,861 for A/BT versus €29,050 for AT strategy which is a €1189 (90%CI: −41,208; +13,240) saving. At sensitivity analysis we verified that the results were mildly sensitive to the costs of PET and ASCT: A/B-T was not cost saving if PET would cost more than €3,031 and ASCT less than €20,200. A/B-T would cost more than €40,000/QALY only at a PET cost higher than €16,300. The results were also sensitive to the portion of PET2 positive patients: A/B-T wouldn't turn out cost saving if the portion was higher than 22%. The results were not sensitive to the rate of severe adverse events during chemotherapy. The results were overall robust, since A/B-T cost less than €30,000/QALY in more than 80% out of 100,000 simulations (MonteCarlo analysis). Conclusions: A/B-T is more efficacious and less expensive than standard AT treatment for advanced-stage HL patients, therefore the routine use of interim-PET is warranted in treatment planning and chemosensitivity adapting in these patients. Disclosures: Off Label Use: The study includes use of Rituximab as maintenance in responding patients after first line chemoimmunotherapy.


2007 ◽  
Vol 25 (18_suppl) ◽  
pp. 14570-14570
Author(s):  
P. Ravasco ◽  
I. Monteiro Grillo ◽  
M. Camilo

14570 Background: Long term data of our published randomized trial of nutritional therapy in colorectal cancer showed that nutritional counseling optimizes pts prognosis. This study aimed to search whether outcomes were affected by individual nutritional & Quality of Life (QoL) parameters after nutrition intervention and radiotherapy (RT). Methods: Data were obtained from the trial pts’ records: G1 (n=37) on individualized nutritional counseling & education (regular foods), G2 (n=37) ad lib+polymeric protein supplements & G3 (n=37) ad lib intake. After RT, current intake (diet history), nutritional status (PG-SGA) & QoL scores (EORTC) were evaluated; their ability to predict survival, disease outcome [loco regional recurrence (LRR), distant metastases] & late RT toxicity (permanent flatulence, abdominal distension, diarrhea) were analyzed after a median follow-up of 3.7 (2.0–5.8) yrs. Results: Energy/protein intakes had decreased in G3 (p<0.01) & increased in G1>G2, p=0.007; wasting only occurred in G3>G2 (p<0.05); QoL scores worsened in G3>G2 (p<0.05) yet improved in G1, p<0.01. On multivariate analyzis of coded time-dependent variables: poorer diet intake, nutritional wasting & worse QoL scores were associated with decreased survival (p<0.002), LRR (p=0.01), distant metastases (p=0.005) & late RT toxicity, p<0.003. Landmark analysis showed that pts with nutritional intake/status & QoL deterioration, had significantly lower survival (hazard ratio [HR]: 8.25; 95% CI 2.74–26.47; p<0.001), worse disease outcome (HR: 8.15; 95% CI 2.22–25.40; p<0.002) & more severe late RT toxicity (HR: 7.15; 95% CI 2.25–16.11; p<0.004). Conclusions: In colorectal cancer after RT, poor diet intake, wasting & deteriorated QoL look as if significant predictors of survival, treatment response & late RT toxicity; such patients are prone to a more aggressive clinical course. No significant financial relationships to disclose.


2009 ◽  
Vol 27 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. e17030-e17030 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. L. Galper ◽  
H. Deshpande ◽  
M. G. Rose ◽  
R. H. Decker

e17030 Background: Concurrent chemoradiation of LAHNC with cetuximab or cisplatin improves survival. The purpose of this study is to compare cetuximab chemoradiation (ExRT) with cisplatin chemoradiation (ChRT) in patients treated with IMRT. Methods: Between January 2005 and August 2008, 24 patients with LAHNC were treated with definitive chemoradiation utilizing IMRT. ExRT was reserved for those whose age or comorbidities precluded ChRT. 15 patients were treated with ChRT and 9 patients were treated with ExRT. Patient charts and Tumor Registry data were reviewed for acute and late toxicity and for local/regional failure (LRF), distant metastases and death. Results: The ExRT cohort was significantly older (median age 71 vs 58, p=0.005) and had more larynx/hypopharynx primaries (44% vs 27%). The cohorts were otherwise balanced with respect to T- and N-stage. Median follow-up for the ExRT and ChRT cohorts was 11 and 12 months, respectively. Overall treatment time in compliant patients was lower in ExRT patients (46 vs 50 days, p=0.05), reflecting increased use of accelerated radiation fractionation (66% vs 40%). See Table for toxicity outcomes. There was a trend toward increased ≥G3 acute mucositis in the ExRT group (p=0.07). However, there was less weight loss (p=0.05). There were similar acute epidermitis and hospitalizations for malnutrition/hydration rates and a nonsignificant decrease in prolonged mucosal toxicity. 1 patient developed skin necrosis and another osteoradionecrosis in the ChRT group. 1-year freedom from LRF was 89% in the ChRT group vs 56% in the ExRT group (p=0.07). Overall survival (OS) at 1 year was 100% (ChRT) vs 88% (ExRT). Conclusions: ExRT showed a trend toward worse acute mucosal toxicity but not late toxicity despite increased rates of altered fractionation with a higher daily dose. ExRT was associated with worse LRC and OS. A randomized study would best compare outcomes and toxicity profiles. Until such analysis, cetuximab should be reserved for patients unable to tolerate ChRT. [Table: see text] No significant financial relationships to disclose.


2018 ◽  
Vol 36 (4_suppl) ◽  
pp. 384-384
Author(s):  
Shaakir Hasan ◽  
Alexander V. Kirichenko ◽  
Paul Renz ◽  
Vijay Kudithipudi ◽  
Molly Vincent ◽  
...  

384 Background: The Albumin-Bilirubin (ALBI) model is a validated prognostic assessment of cirrhosis in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), stratifying patients to grades 1(ALBI-1), 2(ALBI-2), or 3(ALBI-3). We reported that ALBI distinguishes patients at higher risk for hepatic failure(HF) after stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) within the Child Pugh(CP) A population. We now apply the ALBI model to both CP-A and CP-B patients after SBRT with or without orthotropic liver transplant (OLT), and assess its prognostic capability of overall survival (OS) and HF relative to the CP model. Methods: From 2009-2017, 68 patients with 81 HCC lesions and CP-A (45) or CP-B (23) cirrhosis completed SBRT in this IRB approved study. The median dose was 45 Gy (35 - 57 Gy) in 4-7 fractions. Initial ALBI and CP scores were measured against OS and progression of CP class, which was recorded every 3-4 months. Median follow-up = 18 months. Results: The median age = 62 and tumor size = 3.5 cm (1.1 Ð 11 cm). 26 patients were ALBI-1, 31 ALBI-2, and 11 ALBI-3 prior to SBRT. For all patients, 2-year local control was 96%. 1 and 2 year OS was 77% and 54%, disease free survival was 71% and 40%, and freedom from CP progression was 71% and 56%, respectively. OS was significantly different between ALBI-1, ALBI-2, and ALBI-3 patients (P = 0.01), as was progression of CP class (P<0.001). When stratified by initial CP class, there were no significant differences in survival or CP progression [Table 1]. In a subset of 37 CP-A and 15 CP-B without OLT, rates of progressive cirrhosis were better predicted by ALBI (P<0.001) than CP class (P=0.09). Conclusions: Compared to the CP model, the ALBI index more precisely predicted HF and OS in HCC patients for both early and intermediate cirrhosis. Its application may help better select candidates for OLT after SBRT, who may be at higher risk for HF than initially predicted. [Table: see text]


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