Survival outcomes and failure patterns for oropharyngeal cancers treated with simultaneous integrated boost in intensity modulated radiotherapy (SIB-IMRT) and concurrent chemotherapy

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Klin Onkol 2024; 37(3): 202-208. DOI: 10.48095/ccko2024202.

Background: Intensity modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) has become a standard radiotherapy treatment delivery option owing to the advantages it offers in terms of target coverage and organ sparing. Furthermore, the ability to introduce different fractionation for different targets lets us deliver higher doses to the high-risk areas and lower doses to the elective volumes at the same sitting, referred to as simultaneous integrated boost (SIB). In the current study, we intended to retrospectively analyze the clinical outcomes and patterns of the failure of oropharyngeal cancers treated with SIB-IMRT and concurrent chemotherapy at our centre and analyze the factors contributing to poorer outcomes. Material and methods: Data of oropharyngeal cancer patients treated with SIB-IMRT and concurrent chemotherapy were retrieved from the institutional database. Patient demographic details, histopathological features, staging, treatment details, failure patterns and outcomes were documented. All potential factors were evaluated for outcomes. Radiation was delivered by using the SIB-IMRT technique. High-risk planning target volume (PTV) received 66 Gy in 2.2 Gy/fraction, intermediate and low-risk PTV received 60 Gy and 54 Gy, respectively. Primary endpoint was to assess local control (LC), regional control (RC) and loco-regional control (LRC) rates and secondary end point was to evaluate the survival outcomes – overall survival (OS) and cancer-specific mortality. All survival analyzes were performed using the Kaplan-Meier method. Results: A total of 169 cases were included in the final analysis. The median age was 55 years (range 20–78) with 95.3% males. The base of tongue was the most common primary site. Around 54% cases were node negative with 38% patients having stage IV disease. The local control rates for N0 vs. N+ cases were 74.1 vs. 62.3% (P = 0.046), respectively. Similarly, the 4-year RC rates for N0 vs. N+ cases were 94.4 vs. 83.5% (P = 0.024), respectively. On multivariate analysis, only 4-year RC rates showed significant difference between the two (P = 0.039). No differences were found between T stages in LRC and OS. The 4-year LRC rates for stages 1, 2 vs. 3, 4 were non-significant (69.2 vs. 66.3%; P = 0.178). The 4-year OS rate was 81.3%. The 4-year LC and LRC rates were 67.8 and 89.5%, respectively. There were 54 local and 17 regional failures. The median time to failure was 13 months (range 3.6–82.9). Conclusion: SIB-IMRT provides comparable outcomes for oropharyngeal cancers. OS and loco-regional recurrences were significantly worse for nodal positive disease.

http://dx.doi.org/10.48095/ccko2024202

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