stereotactic radiosurgery for lung cancer

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STEREOTACTIC RADIOSURGERY FOR LUNG CANCER Robert Sinha, M.D. Radiation Oncologist Western Radiation Oncolgy Dorothy Schneider Cancer Center

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Robert Sinha, M.D., Radiation Oncologist .Western Radiation Oncology - Dorothy Schneider Cancer Center - 2013 Mills-Peninsula Health Services Cancer Symposium

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Page 1: Stereotactic Radiosurgery for Lung Cancer

STEREOTACTIC RADIOSURGERY FOR LUNG

CANCER

Robert Sinha, M.D.Radiation Oncologist

Western Radiation OncolgyDorothy Schneider Cancer Center

Page 2: Stereotactic Radiosurgery for Lung Cancer

Lung Cancer: The Problem

Incidence: Estimated 226,160 new cases in 2012

Mortality: Estimated 160,340 deaths in 2012

Page 3: Stereotactic Radiosurgery for Lung Cancer

Survival by stage

Stage TNM 5-yr OS Literature**

IA-IB T1-T2N0M0 60-80%

IIA-IIB T1-T2N1M0 25-50%

IIIA T3N0-N1 or T1-3N2

10-40%

IIIB Any T4 or any N3

5%

IV M1=distant mets

<5%

**John D. Minna, Neoplasms of the Lung, in Harrison’s Principles of Internal Medicine, pt. 5 § 75, at 506-515 (Dennis L. Kasper, M.D. et al., eds, 16th ed 2005).

Survival: Only 15-20% of all lung cancer patients (all stages) will be alive 5 years after dx

Page 4: Stereotactic Radiosurgery for Lung Cancer

Role of Radiotherapy

Palliation of symptoms for advanced disease Brain and bone mets, local symptoms

Curative Intent in Stage IIIA and IIIB disease 5 year survival rates of 10 to 30%

Curative Intent for medically inoperable patients Local control with traditional radiotherapy: 25-30%% New techniques like SBRT have local control ~ 90%

Page 5: Stereotactic Radiosurgery for Lung Cancer

Radiotherapy in the 1970s to the 1990s

Step 1: Conventional simulator: diagnostic quality xrays to design fields

Step 2: Fabricate custom cerrobend blocks

Step 3: Perform Dose Calculations

Step 4: Treat patient on linac with mounted blocks

Typical radiation portal for lung cancer

Page 6: Stereotactic Radiosurgery for Lung Cancer

Late 1990s to 2000s

CAT scan based planning 3 Dimensional conformal Therapy IMRT – Intensity Modulated Radiotherapy IGRT – Image Guided Therapy

Page 7: Stereotactic Radiosurgery for Lung Cancer

3D conformal and IMRT: What did we achieve?

• Accuracy• Less side effects – normal tissue sparing• Dose escalation (60Gy to 70-74Gy)

Page 8: Stereotactic Radiosurgery for Lung Cancer

Challenges

Target definition Target Motion

Respiratory motion/tracking Normal tissue tolerance/Increasing dose

Conventional XRT limited to 70Gy Duration of therapy

6 to 7 weeks for conventional therapy is difficult for medically inoperable patients

Page 9: Stereotactic Radiosurgery for Lung Cancer

Highly focused radiation concentrated on the tumor – with sub-millimeter accuracy

Continuous tumor tracking – via respiratory gating Typically 5 or less treatments– high dose per

treatment Biologic Equivalent doses greater than 120Gy at

2Gy/fx

Stereotactic Body Radiosurgery (SBRT):The Ultimate “Targeted Therapy”

Page 10: Stereotactic Radiosurgery for Lung Cancer

Challenge #1: Target Definition

Treatment Planning PET-CT scans

Time of Flight PET/CT

Page 11: Stereotactic Radiosurgery for Lung Cancer

Challenge #2: Target MotionSolution: Respiratory Gating

Page 12: Stereotactic Radiosurgery for Lung Cancer

Challenge #3: Normal Tissue Sparing

Page 13: Stereotactic Radiosurgery for Lung Cancer

Stereotactic hypofractionated high-dose irradiation for stage I non-small cell lung carcinoma: Clinical outcomes in 281 cases of a Japanese multi-institutional

study

14 Institutions in Japan from 1993 to 20033yr OS 69% when BED>100 Gy3yr OS for “operable” patients = 81% when BED> 100

Page 14: Stereotactic Radiosurgery for Lung Cancer

Stage I “Operable” NSCLC: Japanese Experience

IAIB

Page 15: Stereotactic Radiosurgery for Lung Cancer

Baumann, P. et al. J Clin Oncol; 27:3290-3296 2009

• 57 patients• Median age 75• 90% inoperable due to COPD/CAD• 30% T2; 51% T1b; 19% T1a• Dose: 45Gy in 3 fxs (BED 113)

• Local control at 3yrs = 93%• Distant mets at 3yrs = 16%

• Overall survival @ 3yrs = 60%• DSS @ 3yrs = 88%

Scandinavian Study:

Page 16: Stereotactic Radiosurgery for Lung Cancer

• 59 patients• Median age 72• All pts inoperable• T1 – 80%; T2- 20%• Dose: 60Gy in 3 fxs (BED 180)

Median FU 3 yrs:• Local control = 97.6%• Distant mets = 22.1%

• Overall survival @3yrs = 55.8%

• Median survival = 48 months

RTOG 0236:

Page 17: Stereotactic Radiosurgery for Lung Cancer

• Lancet 2012

• 676 Patients, single institution

• Stage I and II patients

• 3 year survival 56%• Median survival: 41 months

• Local Control @5yrs – 90%• Distant mets@5yrs – 20%

Page 18: Stereotactic Radiosurgery for Lung Cancer

Local Control for Primary NSCLC by Dose Fractionation Schemes

Historical Surgical Survival Stage I NSCLC

50-80%

Page 19: Stereotactic Radiosurgery for Lung Cancer

Case Study: NSCLC Left Upper Lung

DEMOGRAPHICS & HISTOLOGY 76 yo Female, 1 month non-productive cough, mass on

CXR CT and PET show no other areas of disease Histology: Poorly differentiated non-small cell lung

carcinoma with squamous features . PET/CT staged as cT1N0M0 stage grouping IA

CLINICAL HISTORY: Referred by: Pulmonologist Previous Treatment: None Multiple medical co-morbidities (FEV1=1.12)

Page 20: Stereotactic Radiosurgery for Lung Cancer

NSCLC Left Upper LungPreOp CT and Fiducial Placement: 1.0 mm CT slices with 1.5x2.0x2.1 cm tumor 4 fiducials are placed within and near the

tumor

Page 21: Stereotactic Radiosurgery for Lung Cancer

TREATMENT PLANNING: • Axial, sagittal and coronal planning images showing the

tumor, lung parenchyma and isodose curves

NSCLC Left Upper Lung

TREATMENT DETAILS:• Rx Dose & Isodose: 60 Gy to 71%, 3 fractions QOD.• Tumor volume = 13.85 cc• Conformity Index (PIV/TV) = 1.37

Page 22: Stereotactic Radiosurgery for Lung Cancer

RESULTS: • Near CR on CT 12 weeks post-treatment, PET negative at 3

months• PFTs unchanged at 3 months• Patient is NED at 3 years

Pre-treatment 3 months post

treatment

NSCLC Left Upper Lung

Page 23: Stereotactic Radiosurgery for Lung Cancer

Solitary Lung Metastasis from Esophageal SCC

Demographics:• 67 yo s/p GTR resection 18 months prior, CAD &

FEV1=1.13 • Patient refused surgery after previous RML surgery

Page 24: Stereotactic Radiosurgery for Lung Cancer

Solitary Lung Metastasis from Esophageal SCC

Pre-Treatment 1 mo post-CK 2 mo post-CK 6 mo post-CK

• Stable PFT’s & negative PET/CT >24 months after SBRT

Rx 54 Gy to 85% isodose in 3 fractions

Page 25: Stereotactic Radiosurgery for Lung Cancer

Rusthoven, K. E. et al. J Clin Oncol; 27:1579-1584 2009

Fig 1. Images from a right lower lobe (RLL) lesion before and after stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT)

Pre - tx Post tx

• 38 patients with 63 lesions• Dose: 48 to 60Gy in 3fxs• Tumor volume included ITV, i.e. total

migration of tumor

• Local control at 2yrs = 96%• Median survival = 19 mo.

• Grade 3 toxicity 8% (almost all skin)• 1 case of symptomatic pneumonitis

Page 26: Stereotactic Radiosurgery for Lung Cancer

Rusthoven, K. E. et al. J Clin Oncol; 27:1579-1584 2009

Fig 2. Actuarial local control in assessable patients

Page 27: Stereotactic Radiosurgery for Lung Cancer

Why SBRT for Metastatic Disease?

Systemic therapies are improving, prolonging survival

But, systemic therapy still can’t durably control GROSS DISEASE (perhaps never will)

Residual disease can “re-seed” SBRT: A minimally toxic yet potent local

therapy to consolidate all gross disease

Page 28: Stereotactic Radiosurgery for Lung Cancer

Summary

SBRT is emerging as the new “standard of care” for medically inoperable early stage NSCLC patients

Early data suggest that it may also achieve high local control and survival rates in operable patients

SBRT is a promising treatment modality for patients with oligiometastatic dz to the lung.

Page 29: Stereotactic Radiosurgery for Lung Cancer

Future Directions

Randomized comparison of Surgery vs SABR for operable patients ACOSOG Z4099/RTOG 1021 – Wedge vs SABR STARS Trial – Lobectomy vs SABR for Stage I

Can adjuvant systemic therapy improve outcomes for early stage inoperable patients?

CALGB/RTOG – SABR +/- chemo for 2-5cm T1 tumors

Page 30: Stereotactic Radiosurgery for Lung Cancer

Thank You