Dosimetric Predictors for Acute Esophagitis during Radiation Therapy for Lung Cancer: An Update of a Large Statewide Observational Study
Recommended Citation
Herr DJ, Yin H, Bergsma DP, Dragovic AF, Matuszak MM, Grubb M, Dominello MM, Movsas B, Kestin LL, Boike TP, Bhatt AK, Hayman JA, Jolly S, Schipper M, Paximadis PA. Dosimetric Predictors for Acute Esophagitis during Radiation Therapy for Lung Cancer: An Update of a Large Statewide Observational Study. Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys 2023; 117(2):e24.
Document Type
Conference Proceeding
Publication Date
10-1-2023
Publication Title
Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys
Abstract
Purpose/Objective(s): Acute esophagitis remains a clinical challenge during the treatment of locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Here, we analyze the dosimetric and patient-level characteristics associated with acute grade 2+ and 3+ esophagitis in patients undergoing radiation therapy for NSCLC across a statewide consortium. Materials/Methods: Demographic, dosimetric, and acute toxicity data were prospectively collected for patients undergoing definitive radiation therapy +/- chemotherapy for stage II-III NSCLC from 2012-2022 across the Michigan Radiation Oncology Quality Consortium (MROQC). Logistic regression models were used to characterize the risk of grade 2+ and 3+ esophagitis as a function of dosimetric and clinical covariates. Multivariate regression models were fitted to predict the 50% risk of grade 2 esophagitis or 3% risk of grade 3 esophagitis at each dose value. Results: Of 1760 patients evaluated, 84.2% had stage III disease and 85.3% received concurrent chemotherapy. 79.2% of patients had an ECOG performance status ≤1. Rates of acute grade 2+ and 3+ esophagitis were 48.4% and 2.2%, respectively. On multivariate analyses, performance status, mean esophageal dose and esophageal D2cc were significantly associated with grade 2+ and 3+ esophagitis. Concurrent chemotherapy was associated with grade 2+ but not grade 3+ esophagitis. Dose-response relationships were modeled for grade 2+ and 3+ esophagitis by mean esophageal dose and esophageal D2cc, stratified by performance status and/or receipt of concurrent chemotherapy. For all patients, mean esophageal dose of 29 Gy and esophageal D2cc of 61 Gy corresponded to a 3% risk of acute grade 3+ esophagitis. For patients receiving chemotherapy, mean esophageal dose of 22 Gy and esophageal D2cc of 49.5 Gy corresponded to a 50% risk of acute grade 2+ esophagitis. Conclusion: Performance status, concurrent chemotherapy, mean esophageal dose and esophageal D2cc are associated with acute esophagitis during definitive treatment of NSCLC. Models that quantitatively account for these factors can be useful in individualizing radiation plans. Mean esophageal dose of 29 Gy and esophageal D2cc of 61 Gy corresponded to a 3% risk of acute grade 3+ esophagitis and merit consideration as contemporary treatment planning constraints.
Volume
117
Issue
2
First Page
e24