scholarly journals Postoperative Radiotherapy for Endometrial Cancer in Elderly (≥80 Years) Patients: Oncologic Outcomes, Toxicity, and Validation of Prognostic Scores

Cancers ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (24) ◽  
pp. 6264
Author(s):  
Eva Meixner ◽  
Kristin Lang ◽  
Laila König ◽  
Elisabetta Sandrini ◽  
Jonathan W. Lischalk ◽  
...  

Endometrial cancer is a common malignancy in elderly women that are more likely to suffer from limiting medical comorbidities. Given this narrower therapeutic ratio, we aimed to assess the oncologic outcomes and toxicity in the adjuvant setting. Out of a cohort of 975 women, seventy patients aged ≥ 80 years, treated with curative postoperative radiotherapy (RT) for endometrial cancer between 2005 and 2021, were identified. Outcomes were assessed using Kaplan–Meier-analysis and comorbidities using the Charlson Comorbidity Index and G8 geriatric score. The overall survival at 1-, 2- and 5-years was 94.4%, 82.6%, and 67.6%, respectively, with significant correlation to G8 score. At 1- and 5-years, the local control rates were 89.5% and 89.5% and distant control rates were 86.3% and 66.9%, respectively. Severe (≥grade 3) acute toxicity was rare with gastrointestinal (2.9%), genitourinary (1.4%), and vaginal disorders (1.4%). Univariate analysis significantly revealed inferior overall survival with lower RT dose, G8 score, hemoglobin levels and obesity, while higher grading, lymphangiosis, RT dose decrease and the omission of chemotherapy reduced distant control. Despite older age and additional comorbidities, elderly patients tolerated curative treatment well. The vast majority completed treatment as planned with very low rates of acute severe side-effects. RT offers durable local control; however, late distant failure remains an issue.

2005 ◽  
Vol 114 (4) ◽  
pp. 314-322 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kevin T. Brumund ◽  
Emmanuel Babin ◽  
Raimundo Gutierrez-Fonseca ◽  
Stéphane Hans ◽  
Dominique Garcia ◽  
...  

On the basis of an inception cohort of 270 patients with a previously untreated invasive squamous cell carcinoma of the true vocal cord (232 T1N0M0, 35 T2N0M0, and 3 T3N0M0) and a minimum of 3 years of follow-up, the authors analyze the oncological and functional outcomes following frontolateral vertical partial laryngectomy without tracheotomy. The 5-year Kaplan-Meier actuarial survival estimate ranged from 83.1% for T1 tumors to 67.2% for T2 tumors (p = .005). On univariate analysis, a significant statistical relationship was noted between reduced survival and the following variables: increased age, increased Charlson comorbidity index score over grade 0, increased tobacco intake, increased alcohol intake, increased T stage, local failure, nodal failure, and development of a metachronous second primary cancer. The hospital mortality rate was 0.4%. A significant postoperative surgical complication was noted in 49 patients (18.1%). The predominant significant surgical complication was wound infection (19 patients; 7%), followed by seroma and major subcutaneous emphysema. No significant statistical relationship was noted in a comparison of each significant postoperative complication (including postoperative death) with the variables under analysis. The incidence of secondary tracheotomy was 0.4%. The incidence of completion laryngectomy due to functional problems was 0%. The 5-year Kaplan-Meier actuarial local control estimate was 91% for T1 tumors and 68.7% for T2 tumors (p < .0001). Within the T1 tumors, the 5-year Kaplan-Meier actuarial local control estimate ranged from 96.2% for tumors without anterior commissure involvement to 74.7% for tumors with anterior commissure involvement (p = .0002). On univariate analysis, a significant statistical relationship was noted between an increase in local recurrence and the following variables: increased T stage, anterior commissure involvement, and pathological margin involvement. The overall disease control rate and laryngeal preservation rate were 92.9% and 93.3%, respectively.


2019 ◽  
Vol 19 (3) ◽  
pp. 259-264
Author(s):  
Sunitha S. Varghese ◽  
Sharief Sidhique ◽  
Anne J. Prabhu ◽  
Simon P. Pavamani ◽  
B. Antonysamy ◽  
...  

AbstractAim of the study:To assess the relapse-free survival (RFS) and the factors influencing local recurrence in patients with desmoid fibromatosis (DF) treated at our centre and to determine the role of post-operative radiotherapy (RT) in improving local control.Methods:A retrospective analysis of 51 patients treated for DF from January 2004 to December 2013 was undertaken. The RFS was calculated using the Kaplan–Meier curve. Univariate analysis was done to assess correlation with tumour size, site, the extent of surgery, margin status and adjuvant RT with RFS.Results:The median age was 28 years with a male:female ratio of 1:3. The most common location of the tumour was anterior abdominal wall (47%). The median tumour size was 10 cm. Wide local excision was done in most patients. Complete resection with negative margin was achieved in eight patients. Post-operative RT was indicated for 43 patients of whom 19 received RT. At a median follow-up of 37 months, RFS in the complete resection with margin negative group was 100%. RFS for the patients with positive or close margins who received RT was 79% and for those who did not receive RT, it was 87%.Conclusions:Complete excision with negative margins gives the best local control in DF. The benefit of post-operative RT could not be ascertained.


Blood ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 128 (22) ◽  
pp. 1613-1613 ◽  
Author(s):  
Megan Othus ◽  
Mikkael A Sekeres ◽  
Sucha Nand ◽  
Guillermo Garcia-Manero ◽  
Frederick R. Appelbaum ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: CR and CR with incomplete count recovery (CRi) are associated with prolonged overall survival (OS) for acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients (pts) treated with curative-intent, induction therapy. For AML pts treated with azacitidine (AZA), response (CR, partial response, marrow CR, or hematologic improvement) is also associated with prolonged OS. We evaluate whether patients given AZA for myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) or AML had longer OS if they achieved CR. We also compare the effect size of CR on OS between AZA regimens and 7+3. Patients and Methods: We analyzed four SWOG studies: S1117 (n=277) was a randomized Phase II study comparing AZA to AZA+lenalidomide or AZA+vorinostat for higher-risk MDS and CMML pts (median age 70 years, range 28-93); S0703 (n=133) treated AML pts not eligible for curative-intent therapy with AZA+mylotarg (median age 73 years, range 60-88). We analyzed the 7+3 arms of S0106 (n=301 were randomized to 7+3, median age 48 years, range 18-60) and S1203 (n=261 were randomized to 7+3, median age 48 years, range 19-60). CR was defined per 2003 International Working Group criteria. In S1117 CR was assessed every 16 weeks and patients remained on therapy until disease progression. In S0703, S0106, and S1203 CR was assessed following 1-2 induction cycles; patients not achieving CR (S0106) or CRi (S0703 and S1203) were removed from protocol treatment. OS was measured from date of study registration. To avoid survival by response bias, we performed landmark analyses of OS. We present results based on the study-specific landmark date that 75% of pts who eventually achieved a CR had done so (S1117 144 days, S0703 42 days, S0106 44 days, S1203 34 days). Pts who did not achieve CR by this date were analyzed with pts who never achieved CR. Pts who died or were lost to follow-up before this date were excluded from analyses. As a sensitivity analysis we also analyzed based on the 90% date; results were not materially different. Log-rank tests were used to compare survival curves and Cox regression models were used for multivariable modeling including baseline prognostic factors age, sex, performance status, white blood cell count, platelet count, marrow blast percentage, de novo disease (versus antecedent MDS or therapy-related disease), study arm (for S1117 only), and cytogenetic risk (IPSS criteria for S1117, SWOG criteria for S0703, S0106, and S1203). The following analysis considers morphologic CR only. S0106 treated CR with incomplete count recover (CRi) pts as treatment failures (S0703 and S1203 did not) and CRi was not defined for S1117. Hematologic improvement was only defined for S1117 patients. Results: In univariate analysis, CR was significantly associated with prolonged survival among MDS pts treated with azactidine on S1117 (HR=0.55, p=0.017), confirming the results seen in AML pts treated with azacitidine (and mylotarg, S0703, HR=0.60, p=0.054) and 7+3 (S0106 HR=0.44, p<0.001; S1203 HR=0.32, p<0.0001) (Figure 1). For each study this relationship remained significant in multivariable analysis controlling for baseline prognostic factors (S1117 HR=0.25, p<0.001; S0703 HR=0.64, p=0.049; S0106 HR=0.45, p<0.001; S1203 HR=0.41, p<0.001). There was no evidence that the impact of CR varied across the four cohorts (interaction p-value = 0.76). In the full cohort, the effect of CR was associated with a HR of 0.45 (Table 1). Conclusion: Adjusting for pt characteristics, achievement of morphologic CR was associated with a 60% improvement in OS, on average, compared to that seen in pts who don't achieve a CR, regardless of whether pts were treated with 7+3 or AZA containing regimens, and suggesting that value CR is similar of whether pts receive more or less "intensive" therapy for these high grade neoplasms. Support: NIH/NCI grants CA180888 and CA180819 Acknowledgment: The authors wish to gratefully acknowledge the important contributions of the late Dr. Stephen H. Petersdorf to SWOG and to study S0106. Figure 1 Kaplan-Meier plots of landmark survival by response. Figure 1. Kaplan-Meier plots of landmark survival by response. Table 1 Multivariable analysis, N=878 Table 1. Multivariable analysis, N=878 Disclosures Othus: Glycomimetics: Consultancy; Celgene: Consultancy. Sekeres:Celgene: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees. Erba:Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc.: Research Funding; Amgen: Consultancy, Research Funding; Seattle Genetics: Consultancy, Research Funding; Agios: Research Funding; Gylcomimetics: Other: DSMB; Juno: Research Funding; Daiichi Sankyo: Consultancy; Sunesis: Consultancy; Pfizer: Consultancy; Ariad: Consultancy; Jannsen: Consultancy, Research Funding; Incyte: Consultancy, DSMB, Speakers Bureau; Celator: Research Funding; Astellas: Research Funding; Celgene: Consultancy, Speakers Bureau; Novartis: Consultancy, Speakers Bureau.


2012 ◽  
Vol 30 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. e18573-e18573
Author(s):  
Saphalta Baghmar ◽  
Vinod Raina ◽  
Atul Sharma ◽  
Lalit Kumar

e18573 Background: To evaluate the clinical features, diagnoses, prognostic factors, progression to MM of the patients of solitary plasmacytoma (SP) treated at AIIMS in last 10 years(2001-2010). Methods: From 2001-2010, we identified 57 patients with SP. OS, EFS, progression to myeloma were calculated using the Kaplan-Meier method and log rank test. Results: Out of 57 patients; 48 patients were evaluable. The M:F ratio was 3.5:1 with the median age of 49 years. The primary site was osseous(SBP) in 49 patients, extramedullary(EMP) in 8; 5 lesions were located in the upper respiratory passages, ie nasal cavity and maxillary sinus and rest of the 3 were one each in bronchus, gluteal region and intracranial. 43.8% of the lesions involved the vertebral column. The thoracic spine was the single most commonly involved site (12/57 patients). Out of 25 patients with lesions in vertebral column, 12 presented with paraparesis. Monoclonal protein was present in 48% patients and Urine M- Band in additional 2 patients. Treatment consisted of RT [45 Gy (8-50 Gy)] alone in 27, excision in 2 and excision and RT(n=9) and combined modality(n=10). The median follow-up was 28 months(range 3-160 months). Local control was achieved in 41(85%) while progressive disease was seen in 4. Serum M protein became undetectable after treatment in 60% patients. 17(41%) patients progressed to MM after initial response. The median duration of progression to MM was 21 months. Even though there was a trend towards a better EFS and OS for EMP than SBP, in univariate analysis this was not statistically significant. Patients having vertebral lesion showed trend towards progression to MM (p=.057). 5 yr EFS & OS were 44.4% and 89 % respectively. Median EFS and OS were 38 and 122 months respectively. 5 yr survival rate in patients who developed MM and those who did not were 81% and 100% respectively. None of the baseline characteristics were predictive of survival. Conclusions: Out of 1129 patients of plasma cell dyscrasias registered between 2001-2010; 5% were of SP. Bone was the most common site. Attainment of local control is the predictor of significant EFS (p<0.0001) and OS (p<0.05). Progression to MM is the commonest pattern of failure. Vertebrae involvement was predictor for disease progression to MM.


2012 ◽  
Vol 50 (2) ◽  
pp. 203-210
Author(s):  
V.J. Lund ◽  
E.J. Chisholm ◽  
D.J. Howard ◽  
W.I. Wei

Background: Melanomas account for 4% of sinonasal malignancies. We present the largest single institution series reported thus far and analyze the outcome with reference to lymph node involvement, radiotherapy and endoscopic resection. Methodology: Survival and recurrence data were analyzed on sinonasal melanoma cases collected from 1963-2010 to compare treatment strategies and to ascertain factors predicting outcome. Results: 115 cases (mean age 65.9) were treated at our institution during this period. All underwent surgical resection of the tumour, 31 (27%) endoscopically, and 51 (44%) also received radiotherapy. Five year overall survival was 28% and disease-free survival was 23.7%. Local control was achieved for a median of 21 months, 5-year disease control rate of 27.7%. Endoscopically resected cases showed a significant overall survival advantage up to 5 years. Radiotherapy did not improve local control or survival. Cervical metastases conferred a dramatically worse outcome. Conclusions: Endoscopic resection of sinonasal melanoma does not prejudice outcome. The role of radiotherapy is unproven.


2012 ◽  
Vol 30 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. 7098-7098
Author(s):  
Eric Xanthopoulos ◽  
Surbhi Grover ◽  
Michael Nino Corradetti ◽  
Annemarie Therese Fernandes ◽  
Miranda Kim ◽  
...  

7098 Background: Although PET/CT has been established for the initial staging of NSCLC, it is still unproven for SCLC. This study examines clinical outcome in patients with limited-stage SCLC staged with and without PET/CT. Methods: An institutional database was reviewed to identify all patients that presented with limited-stage SCLC and treated definitively with concurrent chemoradiation. Overall survival and associations were assessed by the Kaplan-Meier approach, log-rank tests and Cox modeling. Results: From 01/04 – 08/10, 54 consecutive limited-stage SCLC patients were treated with concurrent chemoradiation at the University of Pennsylvania. 40 patients underwent PET staging; 14 underwent CT staging only; all had MR of the brain. Patient characteristics were well distributed, including age (p = 0.35), race (p = 0.21), sex (p = 0.93), dose (45 Gy, p = 0.89), and fractions per day (p = 0.89). PET-staged patients had median survival of 32 vs 15 months in patients without PET (p = 0.03). Survival rate was 57% vs 29% at 24 months. Median time to distant failure of 29 vs 11 months (p = 0.05). Median time to local failure was 41 vs 12 months (p = 0.03). Median followup was 38 months in the 19 surviving PET-staged patients and 40 in the 2 surviving non-PET patients (p = 0.59). Lack of PET-staging (OR = 0.92, p = 0.04) and race (OR = 1.02, p = 0.03) associated with increased distant failure on multivariate Cox analysis. Only PET-staging (OR = 0.93, p = 0.04) associated with increased overall survival on univariable Cox modeling. Conclusions: Median and overall survival of PET-staged SCLC patients compared favorably with those who were not. These findings are presumably due primarily to identification of CT-occult distant disease by PET. This study underscores the value of PET in staging patients with SCLC.


2013 ◽  
Vol 31 (4_suppl) ◽  
pp. 512-512 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Hogan ◽  
Georges Samaha ◽  
John Burke ◽  
David Waldron ◽  
Eoin Condon ◽  
...  

512 Background: Debate persists regarding the relationship between mucin production and cancer-related outcome following curative resection for colon cancer. Lack of consensus is due to (amongst other factors) discrepancies in definition, small cohort studies and the integration of both colon and rectal cancers. This study characterizes the relationship between mucin production and cancer-related outcome in an homogenous single-institute based cohort. Methods: A database spanning demographics, clinico-pathologic characteristics and prognostic factors was generated for all patients undergoing curative-intent colonic resection in the interval 2000 to 2010. Patients were categorized simply as mucin producing (i.e. MC) or non-mucin producing adenocarcinoma (NMC). Primary outcomes included overall survival (time to death from any cause) and disease free survival (time to loco-regional and systemic recurrence). Trends were established for MC and NMC using Kaplan-Meier estimates, plotted and compared using log-rank analysis. Findings significant on univariate analysis were incorporated into multivariate analysis. Cox proportional hazards model was employed to determine the associated hazard of both death and disease recurrence in each group. Statistical analysis was performed using R version 2.15. P < 0.05 was considered significant. Results: 77 mucinous carcinomas (MC) and 358 non mucinous carcinomas (NMC) were included. On univariate analysis, MC was associated with improved overall survival (OS) (P=0.007). Both N1 (HR 1.625, P=0.011) and N2 (HR 2.7, P<0.001) status were associated with adverse OS. On multivariate analysis, MC approached but did not reach statistical significance for improved OS (HR 0.543, P=0.061). A comparison of Kaplan-Meier estimates for overall survival in MC and NMC groups indicated that OS was significantly improved in the MC cohort (P=0.011). There was no difference in disease free survival (P=0.224). Systemic recurrence was greater in the NMC group (P=0.042). Conclusions: Mucin production in colonic adenocarcinoma appears associated with improved overall but not disease-free survival. In addition, the absence of mucin was associated with adverse systemic but not local recurrence.


2015 ◽  
Vol 33 (7_suppl) ◽  
pp. 260-260
Author(s):  
Martin Boegemann ◽  
Phillip Mikah ◽  
Okyaz Eminaga ◽  
Edwin Herrmann ◽  
Philipp Marius Papavassilis ◽  
...  

260 Background: Significant progress in treatment of metastatic castration resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) has been made. Biomarkers to tailor therapy are scarce. To facilitate decision-making we evaluated dynamic changes of alkaline phosphatase (ALP), lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) and prostate specific antigen (PSA) under Abiraterone acetate (AA). ALP-Bouncing can be observed during very early AA-therapy. Methods: Men with bone mCRPC (bmCRPC) on AA 12/2009-01/2014 were analyzed. Dynamic ALP-, LDH- and PSA-changes were analyzed as predictors of best clinical benefit (BCB) and overall survival (OS) with logistic-regression, Cox-regression and Kaplan-Meier-analysis. Results: 39 pre- and 45 post-chemotherapy patients with median follow up of 14.0 months were analyzed. In univariate analysis failure of PSA-reduction ≥50% (PSA-red≥50%) and failure of ALP-Bouncing were the strongest predictors of progressive disease (p=0.003 and 0.021). Rising ALP at 12 weeks (ALP12), no PSA-red≥50% and no ALP-Bouncing were strongest predictors of poor OS, (all p<0.001). Kaplan-Meier-analysis showed worse OS for ALP12, no PSA-red≥50% and no ALP-Bouncing (p<0.001). In subgroup-analysis of oligosymptomatic patients all parameters remained significant predictors of poor OS, no PSA-red≥50% and ALP12 being the strongest (p<0.001). In multivariate analysis PSA-red≥50% remained independent predictor of OS for the whole cohort and for the oligosymptomatic subgroup (p=0.014). No patient with ALP-Bouncing had PD for BCB. Patients with ALP12 had no further benefit of AA. Conclusions: Dynamic changes of ALP, LDH and PSA during AA-therapy are associated with BCB and OS in bmCRPC. ALP-Bouncing occurring earlier than PSA-changes and rising ALP12 under AA may help to decide whether to discontinue AA.


2018 ◽  
Vol 36 (4_suppl) ◽  
pp. 791-791
Author(s):  
Rahul Neal Prasad ◽  
Joshua Elson ◽  
Jordan Kharofa

791 Background: Chemoradiation allows for organ preservation in patients with anal cancer, but patients with large tumors (T3/T4) continue to have high rates of locoregional recurrence. With conformal radiation techniques, there is interest in dose escalation to improve local control for large tumors. Methods: The National Cancer Database (NCDB) was used to identify patients with anal cancer from 2004-2013 with tumors > 5 cm in size. Adult patients with T3 or T4 squamous cell carcinoma who received definitive chemoradiation were included. Patients with prior resection were excluded. Higher dose was defined as > than or equal to 5940 Gy. Statistical analyses were performed using logistic regression, Kaplan-Meier, and Cox proportional hazards for overall survival (OS). Results: In total, 1349 patients were analyzed with 412 (30.5%) receiving higher dose radiation therapy (RT). Dose in the higher group ranged from 5940 – 7000 Gy. 5-year OS was 58% and 60% for higher and lower dose RT, respectively. On univariate analysis, higher dose RT (HR 0.998, CI 0.805 - 1.239, p = 0.9887) was not associated with a change in OS but older age (HR 1.484, CI 1.193 - 1.844, p = 0.0004), male sex (HR 1.660, CI 1.355 - 2.033, p < 0.0001), comorbidities (HR 1.496, CI 1.183 - 1.893, p = 0.0008), and long RT (HR 1.248, CI 1.016 - 1.533, p = 0.0347) were significantly associated with decreased OS. The results of multivariate analysis are shown in the Table. Conclusions: There was no observed difference in OS for dose escalation of anal cancers > 5 cm in this population-based analysis, but differences in local control cannot be assessed through the NCDB. Males, elderly, and comorbid patients were particularly high-risk populations with poor chemoradiation survival outcomes. Reducing treatment breaks is important for improving outcomes. Whether dose escalation of large tumors may improve local control and colostomy-free survival remains an important question and is the subject of ongoing trials. [Table: see text]


2019 ◽  
Vol 37 (7_suppl) ◽  
pp. 599-599
Author(s):  
Yuanyuan Zhang ◽  
Jonathan Schoenhals ◽  
Alana Christie ◽  
Chiachien Wang ◽  
Osama Mohamad ◽  
...  

599 Background: Stereotactic ablative radiotherapy (SAbR) is a standard of care for treating renal cell cancer (RCC) cranial metastasis. We describe the effect of SAbR on oligometastatic extra-cranial RCC disease course. Methods: We retrospectively reviewed 49 patients with oligometastatic RCC with 68 extra-cranial lesions. Patients were treated with SAbR with a curative intent from 2007 to 2017. We analyzed local control, systemic therapy free survival (mPFS), and overall survival. Results: With a median follow-up of 28 months (IQR: 16.0-40.3), the 1-year and 2-year overall survival after SAbR was 93.4% (95% CI: 81.0-97.8), and 83% (95% CI: 67.4-91.5) respectively. The median overall survival was not reached. The median time to systemic therapy was 13.4 months from the first SAbR(95% CI: 8.8-27.6). Median times from the first SabR course to second and third line systemic therapy (or death) were 31.8 months and 45 months, respectively. Patients in the favorable risk group by the Heng’s criteria (HR = 8.67, p = 0.04), with nometastatic disease at diagnosis (HR = 10.38, p < 0.01) and with clear cell histology (HR = 6.15, p < 0.01) exhibited better survival, as shown by univariate analysis. Patients with no metastatic disease at diagnosis (HR = 2.56, p = 0.02) and only one metastasis treated with SAbR (HR = 2.36, p = 0.03) also exhibited better systemic therapy-free survival. SAbR had an excellent local control rate of 94% at 2 years with no reported grade 3 or higher toxicity. Conclusions: SAbR is an effective and safe treatment for oligometastatic RCC, offering excellent local control with minimal toxicity. SAbR delayed the start of systemic therapy for this RCC cohort, offering quality of life benefits for patients without adversely affecting the progression on subsequent lines of systemic therapy. These findings call for prospective verification.


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