학술논문

High-risk Meningioma: Initial Outcomes From NRG Oncology/RTOG 0539.
Document Type
article
Source
International journal of radiation oncology, biology, physics. 106(4)
Subject
Humans
Meningioma
Recurrence
Risk
Survival Analysis
Safety
Aged
Middle Aged
Female
Male
Radiotherapy
Intensity-Modulated
Neoplasm Grading
Clinical Research
Patient Safety
Cancer
Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions
6.5 Radiotherapy and other non-invasive therapies
Other Physical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Oncology and Carcinogenesis
Oncology & Carcinogenesis
Language
Abstract
BackgroundPhase 2 cooperative group meningioma trial assessing the safety and efficacy of risk-adaptive management strategies. This is the initial analysis of the high-risk cohort.Methods and materialsHigh-risk patients were those with a new or recurrent World Health Organization (WHO) grade III meningioma of any resection extent, recurrent WHO grade II of any resection extent, or new WHO grade II after subtotal resection. Patients received intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) using a simultaneous integrated boost technique (60 Gy high dose and 54 Gy low dose in 30 fractions). Three-year progression-free survival (PFS) was the primary endpoint. Adverse events (AEs) were scored per NCI Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events version 3.ResultsOf 57 enrolled patients, 53 received protocol treatment. Median follow-up was 4.0 years (4.8 years for living patients). Two patients withdrew without progression before year 3; for the remaining 51 patients, 3-year PFS was 58.8%. Among all 53 protocol-treated patients, 3-year PFS was 59.2%. Three-year local control was 68.9%, and overall survival was 78.6%. Of 51 patients, 1 patient (1.9%) experienced a late grade-5 necrosis-related AE. All other acute (23 of 53 patients) and late (21 of 51 patients) AEs were grades 1 to 3.ConclusionsPatients with high-risk meningioma treated with IMRT (60 Gy/30) experienced 3-year PFS of 58.8%. Combined acute and late AEs were limited to grades 1 to 3, except for a single necrosis-related grade 5 event. These results support postoperative IMRT for high-risk meningioma and invite ongoing investigations to improve outcomes further.