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INDICATIONS FOR RADIATION THERAPY FOR CERVICAL AND ENDOMETRIAL CANCERS Ludwig Plasswilm Department of Radiation Oncology Kantonsspital St Gallen ENDOMETRIAL CANCER Adjuvant radiotherapy ? G1 IA IB IA Keine* IB <60a: Keine >60a: BT BT** BT** XRT + BT IC IIA <50% IIA >50% G2 Keine* G3 BT <60a: Keine >60a: BT XRT BT** XRT + BT BT** XRT XRT + BT XRT + BT IIB XRT + BT XRT + BT XRT + BT IIIA XRT XRT XRT IIIB XRT + BT XRT + BT XRT + BT IIIC (N+) XRT +/- BT XRT +/- BT XRT +/- BT Additional risk factors (?): histological type, lymphovascular invasion, age, …. Endometrial Cancer Stage I Adjuvant Radiotherapy? Trial No. patients and eligibility Surgery Randomization Age (mean) TAH-BSO* Brachytherapy vs. brachy and pelvic RT 60 Norwegian 1968-1974 540 Stage I PORTEC 1990-1997 714 TAH-BSO IB grad 2-3 IC grade 1-2 NAT** vs. pelvic RT 66 GOG-99 1987-1995 392 TAH-BSO and St IB, IC lymphadenectomy St II (occult) NAT vs. pelvic RT 61 *TAH; total abdominal hysterectomy BSO; bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy ** NAT; no additional treatment Comparison of the randomized trials of adjuvant radiotherapy in stage I endometrial carcinoma Trial Locoregional recurrence Survival Severe complications Norwegian 1968-1974 7% vs. 2% at 5 years P <0.01 89% vs. 91% at 5 years p = NS no data PORTEC 1990-1997 14% vs. 4% at 5 years P <0.001 85% vs. 81% at 5 years P = 0.31 3% GI at 5 years GOG-99 1987-1995 12% vs. 3% at 2 years P <0.01 86% vs. 92% at 4 years P = 0.56 8% GI at 2 years Post Operative Radiation Therapy in Endometrial Carcinoma ? 715 Pat.: TAH / BSO; no lymphadenectomy • IB, G2 oder G3; IC, G1 oder G2 • RT 46 Gy pelvin vs. no IC G3 Locoregional relapse Surgery And Postoperative Radiotherapy Versus Surgery Alone For Patients With Stage-1 Endometrial Carcinoma: Multicentre Randomised Trial. PORTEC Study Group 14% P < 0.001 4% no adj. RT (G1/2: 90%) OS ! Creutzberg 2000 Postoperative Radiotherapy For Stage 1 Endometrial Carcinoma: Long-term Outcome Of The Randomized PORTEC Trial With Central Pathology Review Locoregional relapse 14% 5% Scholten 2005 Locoregional relapse according to grade grade3 risk 18% ! 11% 7% Locoregional relapse according to age group ! 13% 11% age risk 4% Scholten 2005 Adjuvant External Beam Radiotherapy In The Treatment Of Endometrial Cancer (MRC ASTEC And NCIC CTG EN.5 Randomised Trials): Pooled Trial Results, Systematic Review, And Meta-analysis July, 1996 - March, 2005; 905 (789 ASTEC, 116 EN.5) women with intermediate-risk or high-risk earlystage disease from 112 centres in seven countries (UK, Canada, Poland, Norway, New Zealand, Australia, USA) were randomly assigned after surgery to observation (453) or to external beam radiotherapy (452). RT: 40–46 Gy in 20–25 daily fractions to the pelvis, treating five times a week. 2009 Adjuvant External Beam Radiotherapy In The Treatment Of Endometrial Cancer (MRC ASTEC And NCIC CTG EN.5 Randomised Trials): Pooled Trial Results, Systematic Review, And Meta-analysis 2009 Adjuvant External Beam Radiotherapy In The Treatment Of Endometrial Cancer (MRC ASTEC And NCIC CTG EN.5 Randomised Trials): Pooled Trial Results, Systematic Review, And Meta-analysis Overall survival 2009 Adjuvant External Beam Radiotherapy In The Treatment Of Endometrial Cancer (MRC ASTEC And NCIC CTG EN.5 Randomised Trials): Pooled Trial Results, Systematic Review, And Meta-analysis Isolated vaginal or pelvic initial recurrence With brachytherapy used in 53% of women in ASTEC/EN.5, the local recurrence rate in the observation group at 5 years was 6.1% 2009 EXTERNAL BEAM RADIOTHERAPY vs. BRACHYTHERAPY Vaginal Brachytherapy Versus Pelvic External Beam Radiotherapy For Patients With Endometrial Cancer Of High-intermediate Risk (PORTEC-2): An Open-label, Non-inferiority, Randomised Trial 427 patients with stage I or IIA endometrial carcinoma with features of high-intermediate; (1) age greater than 60 years and stage 1C grade 1 or 2 disease, or stage 1B grade 3 disease; (2) stage 2A disease, any age. ! Recurrence (all patients), after a median follow-up of 45 months Kaplan-Meier survival curve for overall survival Nout 2010 External Pelvic And Vaginal Irradiation Versus Vaginal Irradiation Alone As Postoperative Therapy In Medium-risk Endometrial Carcinoma - A Prospective Randomized Study Five Swedish cancer centers, from January 1997 through February 2008; n = 562 patients, median follow-up: 62 months Patient and tumor characteristics Sorbe 2012 External Pelvic And Vaginal Irradiation Versus Vaginal Irradiation Alone As Postoperative Therapy In Medium-risk Endometrial Carcinoma - A Prospective Randomized Study The definition of medium-risk carcinomas was as follows: 1) FIGO Stage I (surgical staging); 2) Endometrioid histological type; 3) presence of one of the following risk factors: FIGO Grade 3 (poorly differentiated), deep (>50%) myometrial infiltration, or DNA aneuploidy; Cumulative proportion of locoregional recurrences versus type of postoperative treatment. Overall survival rate versus type of postoperative treatment. Sorbe 2012 External Pelvic And Vaginal Irradiation Versus Vaginal Irradiation Alone As Postoperative Therapy In Medium-risk Endometrial Carcinoma - A Prospective Randomized Study Late side effects vs. type of treatment Abbreviations: Arm A = EBRT plus VBT; Arm B = VBT alone. Late tissue reactions (based on RTOG/EORTC toxicity criteria) were recorded more then 3 months after radiotherapy. Sorbe 2012 Adjuvant Radiotherapy for Stage I Endometrial Cancer: An Updated Cochrane Systematic Review and Meta-analysis Forest plot of hazard ratios (HRs) comparing the locoregional recurrence for stage I endometrial carcinoma patients who received external beam radiotherapy (EBRT) treatment vs those who received no EBRT treatment. Kong 2012 Endometrial Cancer – early stage Indications for radiation therapy Stage Grade 1 Grade 2 Grade 3 IA (Endometrium) IA no adj treatment adj BT IB (Myometr. Invasion < 50%) IB IC adj BT (Myometr. Invasion > 50%) adj EBRT ? Additional risk factors: histological type, lymphovascular invasion, age, …. BT EBRT ?! Low-risk Intermediate-risk High-risk Endometrial Cancer – advanced stage Indications for radiation therapy IIA <50% G1 G2 BT BT G3 XRT + BT IIA >50% XRT + BT XRT + BT XRT + BT IIB XRT + BT XRT + BT XRT + BT IIIA XRT XRT XRT IIIB XRT + BT XRT + BT XRT + BT IIIC (N+) XRT +/- BT XRT +/- BT XRT +/- BT BT = Brachytherapy XRT = external beam Radiotherapy two institutions, 1990 to 2003 608 eligible women RT was delivered to 133 women Survival all pts. stage IA - IIA non random ! Survival according to stage grouping stage IC, IIA plus Chemo? S + RT 65% S 10 y; 40% Macdonald 2006 PORTEC 3: Randomized Trial of Radiation Therapy With or Without Chemotherapy for Endometrial Cancer 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. stage IA with invasion, grade 3 with documented LVSI stage IB grade 3 stage II stage IIIA or IIIC; or IIIB if parametrial invasion only stage IA (with invasion), IB, II, or III with serous or clear cell histology External beam pelvic radiotherapy (48.6 Gy in 1.8 Gy fractions) Vaginal brachytherapy boost in case of cervical involvement cisplatin 50 mg/m2 i.v., 2 cycles during radiotherapy, 3 wks interval carboplatin AUC 5, 4 cycles after completion of radiotherapy, 3 wks interval paclitaxel 175 mg/m2, 4 cycles after completion of radiotherapy, 3 wks interval Indications for radiation therapy for cervical cancers Primary Radio (Chemo)- therapy Adjuvant Radio (Chemo)- therapy Randomised Study Of Radical Surgery Versus Radiotherapy For Stage Ib-IIa Cervical Cancer September, 1986, - December, 1991, 343 eligible patients were randomised: 172 to surgery and 171 to radical radiotherapy Adjuvant radiotherapy was delivered after surgery for women with surgical stage pT2b or greater, less than 3 mm of safe cervical stroma, cut-through, or positive nodes 62 of 114 women with cervical diameters of 4 cm or smaller and 46 of 55 with diameters larger than 4 cm received adjuvant therapy 5-year overall and disease-free survival were identical in the surgery and radiotherapy groups (83% and 74%, respectively, for both groups, median follow-up of 87 months) Recurrent disease: 25% in the surgery group and 26% in the radiotherapy group. 28% surgery-group patients had severe morbidity compared with 12% radiotherapy-group patients (p = 0.0004) Landoni 1997 Concurrent Cisplatin-based Radiotherapy And Chemotherapy For Locally Advanced Cervical Cancer Randomized trial of radiotherapy in combination with three concurrent chemotherapy regimens — cisplatin alone; cisplatin, fluorouracil, and hydroxyurea; and hydroxyurea alone Women with primary untreated invasive squamous-cell carcinoma, adenosquamous carcinoma, or adenocarcinoma of the cervix of stage IIB, III, or IVA, without involvement of the para-aortic lymph nodes; n= 526 Kaplan–Meier Estimates of Overall Survival The overall survival rate was significantly higher among patients in the group given radiotherapy combined with cisplatin therapy (117 of 176, P=0.004) and among patients in the group given radiotherapy combined with treatment with cisplatin, fluorouracil, and hydroxyurea (116 of 173, P=0.002) than among patients in the group given radiotherapy combined with hydroxyurea therapy (88 of 177). Rose 1999 Phase III Trial Comparing Radical Radiotherapy With and Without Cisplatin Chemotherapy in Patients With Advanced Squamous Cell Cancer of the Cervix (National Cancer Institute of Canada) Patient Characteristics stage IB to IVA squamous cell cervical cancer with central disease > 5 cm or histologically confirmed pelvic lymph node involvement randomized to receive RT (EBRT plus brachytherapy) plus weekly CDDP chemotherapy (40 mg/m2) (arm 1) or the same RT without chemotherapy (arm 2). Pearcey 2002 Phase III Trial Comparing Radical Radiotherapy With and Without Cisplatin Chemotherapy in Patients With Advanced Squamous Cell Cancer of the Cervix Progression-free survival Solid line, CDDP and RT; dotted line, RT alone. Overall survival Solid line, CDDP and RT; dotted line, RT alone. Pearcey 2002 Phase III, Open-Label, Randomized Study Comparing Concurrent Gemcitabine Plus Cisplatin and Radiation Followed by Adjuvant Gemcitabine and Cisplatin Versus Concurrent Cisplatin and Radiation in Patients With Stage IIB to IVA Carcinoma of the Cervix All patients received EBRT, 28 fractions of 1.8 Gy per day, 5 days per week, over the 6 weeks. All patients were scheduled to receive 30 to 35 Gy of brachytherapy (BCT) in week 7. Arm A treatment consisted of gemcitabine plus cisplatin chemoradiotherapy for 6 weeks. After BCT and a subsequent 2-week rest period, patients randomly assigned to arm A received adjuvant chemotherapy (cisplatin 50 mg/m2 on day 1 plus gemcitabine 1,000 mg/m2 on days 1 and 8, every 3 weeks for two cycles). Arm B treatment consisted of cisplatin chemoradiotherapy for 6 weeks. Duenas-Gonzales 2011 Phase III, Open-Label, Randomized Study Comparing Concurrent Gemcitabine Plus Cisplatin and Radiation Followed by Adjuvant Gemcitabine and Cisplatin Versus Concurrent Cisplatin and Radiation in Patients With Stage IIB to IVA Carcinoma of the Cervix Kaplan-Meier estimates of progression-free survival and overall survival for patients who were randomly assigned to arm A or arm B. PFS at 3 years is shown by the dotted black lines and was 74.4% for arm A and 65.0% for arm B (P = .029). HR, hazard ratio. Duenas-Gonzales 2011 Results of the GYNECO 02 Study, a Phase III Trial Comparing Hysterectomy with No Hysterectomy in Patients with a (Clinical and Radiological) Complete Response After Chemoradiation Therapy for Stage IB2 or II Cervical Cancer stage IB2 or II cervical cancer without extrapelvic disease on conventional imaging; pelvic external radiation therapy (45 Gy with or without parametrial or nodal boost) with Characteristics of patients in both arms concomitant cisplatin chemotherapy (40 mg/m2 per week) followed by uterovaginal brachytherapy (15 Gy to the intermediate risk clinical target volume); and (c) complete clinical and radiological response 6 – 8 weeks after brachytherapy. Patients were randomized between HT (arm A) and no HT (arm B). PDPF survival, OS, and DFS are shown for patients treated with definitive radiotherapy using HDR-ICBT with a low cumulative dose schedule (BED 62 Gy10 at point A). Morice 2012 Results of the GYNECO 02 Study, a Phase III Trial Comparing Hysterectomy with No Hysterectomy in Patients with a (Clinical and Radiological) Complete Response After Chemoradiation Therapy for Stage IB2 or II Cervical Cancer Kaplan–Meier estimates of the overall survival rate for patients in arm A (hysterectomy) and arm B (no hysterectomy). Kaplan–Meier estimates of the event-free survival rate for patients in arm A (hysterectomy) and arm B (no hysterectomy). Morice 2012 Adjuvant Radio (Chemo)- therapy A Phase III Randomized Trial Of Postoperative Pelvic Irradiation In Stage Ib Cervical Carcinoma With Poor Prognostic Features: Followup Of A Gynecologic Oncology Group Study Stage IB cervical cancer with negative lymph nodes but with 2 or more of the following Patient and tumor characteristics features: more than one third (deep) stromal invasion, capillary lymphatic space involvement, and tumor diameter of 4 cm or more. EBRT: planned pelvic dose was from 46 Gy in 23 fractions to 50.4 Gy in 28 fractions. Rotman 2006 A Phase III Randomized Trial Of Postoperative Pelvic Irradiation In Stage Ib Cervical Carcinoma With Poor Prognostic Features: Followup Of A Gynecologic Oncology Group Study RT OBS OBS RT Cumulative risk of recurrences by treatment group: 24 RT patients and 43 OBS patients recurred. RT significantly reduced recurrence risk (p=0.007). OBS=observation; RT=irradiation. Progression-free survival by treatment group: 30 RT patients and 49 OBS patients recurred or died. RT significantly increased progression-free survival (p=0.009). OBS=observation; RT= irradiation. OS; n.s. Rotman 2006 Concurrent Chemotherapy and Pelvic Radiation Therapy Compared With Pelvic Radiation Therapy Alone as Adjuvant Therapy After Radical Surgery in High-Risk Early-Stage Cancer of the Cervix Patient Characteristics Patients had undergone a radical hysterectomy with pelvic lymphadenectomy. xx Clinical stage IA2, IB, and IIA and who had - positive pelvic lymph nodes and/or - positive margins and/or - microscopic involvement of the parametrium x Peters 2000 Concurrent Chemotherapy and Pelvic Radiation Therapy Compared With Pelvic Radiation Therapy Alone as Adjuvant Therapy After Radical Surgery in High-Risk Early-Stage Cancer of the Cervix RT: 49.3 GY RT in 29 fractions to a standard pelvic field. Chemotherapy: consisted of bolus cisplatin 70 mg/m2 and a 96-hour infusion of fluorouracil 1,000 mg/m2/d every 3 weeks for four cycles, with the first and second cycles given concurrent to RT. P = .003 P = .007 Progression-free survival for 127 patients Overall survival for 127 patients randomized to receive CT + RT and for 116 patients randomized to receive RT alone. randomized to receive CT + RT and for 116 patients randomized to receive RT alone. Peters 2000 Pelvic Irradiation With Concurrent Chemotherapy Versus Pelvic and Para-Aortic Irradiation for High-Risk Cervical Cancer: An Update of Radiation Therapy Oncology Group Trial (RTOG) 90-01 stage IIB to IVA disease, stage IB to IIA disease with a tumor diameter 5 cm, or Pretreatment Tumor Characteristics positive pelvic lymph nodes. Patients were stratified by stage (study was not designed to detect differences in outcome within the subgroups). ! Eifel 2004 Pelvic Irradiation With Concurrent Chemotherapy Versus Pelvic and Para-Aortic Irradiation for High-Risk Cervical Cancer: An Update of Radiation Therapy Oncology Group Trial (RTOG) 90-01 Chemotherapy: consisted of an IV infusion of cisplatin 75 mg/m2 of body-surface area over a 4-hour period followed by an IV infusion of fluorouracil 4,000 mg/m2 over a 96-hour period. Two additional cycles of chemotherapy were scheduled at 3-week intervals. Kaplan-Meier estimates of overall survival for patients who received extended-field radiotherapy (EFRT) or concurrent chemotherapy and radiotherapy (CT-RT; P < .0001). Kaplan-Meier estimates of overall survival for patients who received extended-field radiotherapy (EFRT) or concurrent chemotherapy and radiotherapy (CT-RT) in subgroups stratified by International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics stage. Eifel 2004 Pelvic Irradiation With Concurrent Chemotherapy Versus Pelvic and Para-Aortic Irradiation for High-Risk Cervical Cancer: An Update of Radiation Therapy Oncology Group Trial (RTOG) 90-01 Estimated 5-Year Survival and Local Recurrence Rates in Stratified Stage Groups Abbreviations: RT, radiotherapy; FIGO, International Federation of Gynecology and obstetrics. A value less than 1 indicates an advantage for pelvic RT and chemotherapy. †Failure is death as a result of treated cancer, complications of protocol treatment, or unknown causes. Eifel 2004 Cervical Cancer Indications for radiation therapy (RT / RCT) definitive radio- / radiochemotherapy accepted as one of the treatment options for early-stage cervical cancer postoperative treatment when nodes or margins are positive or parametrial extension is noted pathologically locally advanced disease chemotherapy / optimal chemotherapy regimen?