Prophylactic cranial irradiation in locally advanced non-small-cell lung cancer after multimodality treatment: Long-term follow-up and investigationsof late neuropsychologic effects
M. Stuschke et al., Prophylactic cranial irradiation in locally advanced non-small-cell lung cancer after multimodality treatment: Long-term follow-up and investigationsof late neuropsychologic effects, J CL ONCOL, 17(9), 1999, pp. 2700-2709
Purpose: Relapse pattern and late toxicities in longterm survivors were ana
lyzed after the introduction of prophylactic cranial irradiation (PCI) into
a phase II trial on trimodality treatment of locally advanced (LAD) non-sm
all-cell lung cancer (NSCLC).
Patients and Methods: Seventy-five patients with stage IIIA(N2)/111B NSCLC
were treated with induction chemotherapy preoperative radiochemotherapy, an
d surgery. PCI was routinely offered during the second period of study accr
ual. Patients were given a total radiation dose of 30 Gy (2 Gy per daily fr
action) over a 3-week period starting 1 day after the last chemotherapy cyc
le.
Results: Introduction of PCI reduced the rate of brain metastases as first
site of relapse from 30% to 8% at 4 years (P = .005) and that of overall br
ain relapse from 54% to 13% (P < .0001). The effect of PCI was also observe
d in the good-prognosis subgroup of 47 patients who had a partial response
or complete response to induction chemotherapy, with a reduction of brain r
elapse as first failure from 23% to 0% at 4 years (P = .01). Neurapsycholog
ic testing revealed impairments in attention and visual memory in long-term
survivors who received PCI as well as in those who did no, receive PCI. T2
-weighted magnetic resonance imaging revealed white matter abnormalities of
higher grades in patients who received PCI than in those who did not.
Conclusion: PCI at a moderate dose reduced brain metastases in LAD-NSCLC to
a clinically significant extent, comparable to that in limited-disease sma
ll-cell lung cancer. Late toxicity to normal brain was acceptable. This stu
dy supports the use of PCI within intense protocols for LAD-NSCLC, particul
arly in patients with favorable prognostic factors. (C) 1999 by American So
ciety of Clinical Oncology.