- Browse by Author
Browsing by Author "Ramnath, Nithya"
Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
Results Per Page
Sort Options
Item Effect of Midtreatment PET/CT-Adapted Radiation Therapy With Concurrent Chemotherapy in Patients With Locally Advanced Non–Small-Cell Lung Cancer(American Medical Association, 2017-10-01) Kong, Feng-Ming; Ten Haken, Randall K.; Schipper, Matthew; Frey, Kirk A.; Hayman, James; Gross, Milton; Ramnath, Nithya; Hassan, Khaled A.; Matuszak, Martha; Ritter, Timothy; Bi, Nan; Wang, Weili; Orringer, Mark; Cease, Kemp B.; Lawrence, Theodore S.; Kalemkerian, Gregory P.; Radiation Oncology, School of MedicineIMPORTANCE Our previous studies demonstrated that tumors significantly decrease in size and metabolic activity after delivery of 45 Gy of fractionated radiatiotherapy (RT), and that metabolic shrinkage is greater than anatomic shrinkage. This study aimed to determine whether 18F-fludeoxyglucose–positron emission tomography/computed tomography (FDG-PET/CT) acquired during the course of treatment provides an opportunity to deliver higher-dose radiation to the more aggressive areas of the tumor to improve local tumor control without increasing RT-induced lung toxicity (RILT), and possibly improve survival. OBJECTIVE To determine whether adaptive RT can target high-dose radiation to the FDG-avid tumor on midtreatment FDG-PET to improve local tumor control of locally advanced non–small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC). DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS A phase 2 clinical trial conducted at 2 academic medical centers with 42 patients who had inoperable or unresectable stage II to stage III NSCLC enrolled from November 2008, to May 2012. Patients with poor performance, more than 10% weight loss, poor lung function, and/or oxygen dependence were included, providing that the patients could tolerate the procedures of PET scanning and RT. INTERVENTION Conformal RT was individualized to a fixed risk of RILT (grade >2) and adaptively escalated to the residual tumor defined on midtreatment FDG-PET up to a total dose of 86 Gy in 30 daily fractions. Medically fit patients received concurrent weekly carboplatin plus paclitaxel followed by 3 cycles of consolidation. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES The primary end point was local tumor control. The trial was designed to achieve a 20% improvement in 2-year control from 34% of our prior clinical trial experience with 63 to 69 Gy in a similar patient population. RESULTS The trial reached its accrual goal of 42 patients: median age, 63 years (range, 45–83 years); male, 28 (67%); smoker or former smoker, 39 (93%); stage III, 38 (90%). Median tumor dose delivered was 83 Gy (range, 63–86 Gy) in 30 daily fractions. Median follow-up for surviving patients was 47 months. The 2-year rates of infield and overall local regional tumor controls (ie, including isolated nodal failure) were 82% (95% CI, 62%–92%) and 62% (95% CI, 43%–77%), respectively. Median overall survival was 25 months (95% CI, 12–32 months). The 2-year and 5-year overall survival rates were 52% (95% CI, 36%–66%) and 30% (95% CI, 16%–45%), respectively. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE Adapting RT-escalated radiation dose to the FDG-avid tumor detected by midtreatment PET provided a favorable local-regional tumor control. The RTOG 1106 trial is an ongoing clinical trial to validate this finding in a randomized fashion. TRIAL REGISTRATION clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT01190527Item Radiation-induced lung toxicity in non-small-cell lung cancer: Understanding the interactions of clinical factors and cytokines with the dose-toxicity relationship(Elsevier, 2017-10) Hawkins, Peter G.; Boonstra, Philip S.; Hobson, Stephen; Hearn, Jason W.D.; Hayman, James A.; Haken, Randall K. Ten; Matuszak, Martha M.; Stanton, Paul; Kalemkerian, Gregory P.; Ramnath, Nithya; Lawrence, Theodore S.; Schipper, Matthew J.; Kong, Feng-Ming (Spring); Jolly, Shruti; Radiation Oncology, School of MedicineBACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Current methods to estimate risk of radiation-induced lung toxicity (RILT) rely on dosimetric parameters. We aimed to improve prognostication by incorporating clinical and cytokine data, and to investigate how these factors may interact with the effect of mean lung dose (MLD) on RILT. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Data from 125 patients treated from 2004 to 2013 with definitive radiotherapy for stages I-III NSCLC on four prospective clinical trials were analyzed. Plasma levels of 30 cytokines were measured pretreatment, and at 2 and 4weeks midtreatment. Penalized logistic regression models based on combinations of MLD, clinical factors, and cytokine levels were developed. Cross-validated estimates of log-likelihood and area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) were used to assess accuracy. RESULTS: In prognosticating grade 3 or greater RILT by MLD alone, cross-validated log-likelihood and AUC were -28.2 and 0.637, respectively. Incorporating clinical features and baseline cytokine levels increased log-likelihood to -27.6 and AUC to 0.669. Midtreatment cytokine data did not further increase log-likelihood or AUC. Of the 30 cytokines measured, higher levels of 13 decreased the effect of MLD on RILT, corresponding to a lower odds ratio for RILT per Gy MLD, while higher levels of 4 increased the association. CONCLUSIONS: Although the added prognostic benefit from cytokine data in our model was modest, understanding how clinical and biologic factors interact with the MLD-RILT relationship represents a novel framework for understanding and investigating the multiple factors contributing to radiation-induced toxicity.