Radical radiation therapy of advanced lung cancer. Evaluation of prognostic factors and results of continuous and split course treatment
β Scribed by Bahman Emami; John E. Munzenrider; Ding Jen Lee; Juan B. Rene
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1979
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 874 KB
- Volume
- 44
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0008-543X
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
One hundred patients with inoperable (80) or unresectable (20) bronchogenic carcinoma without evidence of spread beyond the thorax and supraclavicular nodes were planned for radical radiotherapy. Seventy-six patients received continuous irradiation (6000 rads in 30 treatments in 6 weeks, TDF 99) and 24 received split course therapy (2 courses of 2500 rads in 10 treatments with a 3 week break between courses, TDF 88). Forty-three patients had squamous cell carcinoma or adenocarcinoma and were considered to have favorable prognostic factors, while 57 patients had unfavorable prognostic factors: undifferentiated large cell or small cell carcinoma, supraclavicular metastases, SVC obstruction, superior sulcus tumors, or bone erosion in continuity with the tumor.
Ninety-two patients completed the planned course of treatment. In patients completing treatment, local control of cancer within the irradiated volume was achieved in 58.5% of continuously irradiated patients and 45.4% of patients receiving split course therapy.
Median survival was 1.2 months in patients not completing treatment and 12 months for the patients who completed treatment; 19% of the total group survived 3 years. Median and 3 year survivals of 14 months and 20.4% and of 9 months and 11% were observed for patients treated continuously and by the split course techniques, respectively. Corresponding survival figures for patients with favorable and unfavorable prognostic signs were 21 months and 26%, and 4 months and 11%, respectively.
Implications of these data for treatment planning and patient selection for radical radiotherapy in bronchogenic carcinoma are discussed.
Cancer 44:446-456, 1979.
UNG CANCER HAS BEEN identified as a L current major priority in health care in both the United States and the An estimated 98,000 new cases occurred in the From the
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