open access

Vol 4, No 1 (2019)
Original article
Published online: 2019-02-11
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Long-term survival in patients with NSCLC treated with single-fraction vs. multi-fraction palliative radiotherapy in the case of lung tumor, brain metastases and bone metastases

Sylwia Szablewska1, Zofia Roszkowska2, Katarzyna Białożyk-Mularska1, Marzena Anna Lewandowska3, Krzysztof Roszkowski1
·
Medical Research Journal 2019;4(1):8-12.
Affiliations
  1. Department of Oncology, Radiotherapy and Gynecologic Oncology, Collegium Medicum, Nicolaus Copernicus University,, Romanowskiej 2, 85-796 Bydgoszcz
  2. Jagiellonian University, Collegium Medicum, Faculty of Medicine,, Golebia 24, 31-007 Krakow, Poland
  3. Department of Thoracic Surgery and Tumors, Collegium Medicum Bydgoszcz, Nicolaus Copernicus University, Romanowskiej 2, 85-796 Bydgoszcz, Poland

open access

Vol 4, No 1 (2019)
ORIGINAL ARTICLES
Published online: 2019-02-11

Abstract

Background: Patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) are candidates for different types of treatment, including chemotherapy and radiotherapy or supportive care. Despite the fatal prognosis in advanced disease, many experienced radiation oncologists will apply radiation at low doses with the intention of palliative care. Methods: We used an extensive database of medical patients diagnosed with NSCLC, treated with palliative radiotherapy at the Oncology Centre in Bydgoszcz, from June 1998 to December 2013. A group of 3202 patients was divided into subgroups: Group A)1762 patients irradiated on the lung tumor (without distant metastases): Total dose: A1) 6Gy/1 fr.(n=19); A2) 8Gy/1fr.(n=276); A3) 20Gy/5fr.(n=1349); A4) 30Gy/10fr.(n=118). Group B) 548 patients irradiated on the central nervous system (CNS) metastases: B1) 20Gy/5fr.(n=476); B2) 30Gy/10fr.(n=72). Group C) 892 patients irradiated on the bone metastases: C1) 8Gy/1fr.(n=452); C2) 10Gy/1fr.(n=30); C3) 20Gy/5fr.(n=341); C4) 30Gy/10fr.(n=69). Results: Patients with irradiation of a lung tumor: The longest OS was observed in the group of patients irradiated with doses of 20 Gy (76%) and 30 Gy (7%). Patients with irradiation of bone metastases: No significant differences in OS were observed between the employed fractionation regimens. Patients with irradiation of CNS metastases: The choice of a higher dose of radiation therapy did not demonstrate differences in median OS values compared to a lower dose. Conclusions: The patients who were prescribed single fraction palliative radiotherapy did not have poorer prognoses or experience shorter survival than patients who were prescribed multi-fraction pRT in the case of lung tumor, brain metastases and bone metastases.

Abstract

Background: Patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) are candidates for different types of treatment, including chemotherapy and radiotherapy or supportive care. Despite the fatal prognosis in advanced disease, many experienced radiation oncologists will apply radiation at low doses with the intention of palliative care. Methods: We used an extensive database of medical patients diagnosed with NSCLC, treated with palliative radiotherapy at the Oncology Centre in Bydgoszcz, from June 1998 to December 2013. A group of 3202 patients was divided into subgroups: Group A)1762 patients irradiated on the lung tumor (without distant metastases): Total dose: A1) 6Gy/1 fr.(n=19); A2) 8Gy/1fr.(n=276); A3) 20Gy/5fr.(n=1349); A4) 30Gy/10fr.(n=118). Group B) 548 patients irradiated on the central nervous system (CNS) metastases: B1) 20Gy/5fr.(n=476); B2) 30Gy/10fr.(n=72). Group C) 892 patients irradiated on the bone metastases: C1) 8Gy/1fr.(n=452); C2) 10Gy/1fr.(n=30); C3) 20Gy/5fr.(n=341); C4) 30Gy/10fr.(n=69). Results: Patients with irradiation of a lung tumor: The longest OS was observed in the group of patients irradiated with doses of 20 Gy (76%) and 30 Gy (7%). Patients with irradiation of bone metastases: No significant differences in OS were observed between the employed fractionation regimens. Patients with irradiation of CNS metastases: The choice of a higher dose of radiation therapy did not demonstrate differences in median OS values compared to a lower dose. Conclusions: The patients who were prescribed single fraction palliative radiotherapy did not have poorer prognoses or experience shorter survival than patients who were prescribed multi-fraction pRT in the case of lung tumor, brain metastases and bone metastases.

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Keywords

palliative radiotherapy, survival, NSCLC, single-fraction, multi-fraction

About this article
Title

Long-term survival in patients with NSCLC treated with single-fraction vs. multi-fraction palliative radiotherapy in the case of lung tumor, brain metastases and bone metastases

Journal

Medical Research Journal

Issue

Vol 4, No 1 (2019)

Article type

Original article

Pages

8-12

Published online

2019-02-11

Page views

963

Article views/downloads

906

DOI

10.5603/MRJ.a2019.0007

Bibliographic record

Medical Research Journal 2019;4(1):8-12.

Keywords

palliative radiotherapy
survival
NSCLC
single-fraction
multi-fraction

Authors

Sylwia Szablewska
Zofia Roszkowska
Katarzyna Białożyk-Mularska
Marzena Anna Lewandowska
Krzysztof Roszkowski

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