Can modest escalations of dose be detected as increased tumor control?
- PMID: 1531477
- DOI: 10.1016/0360-3016(92)90039-k
Can modest escalations of dose be detected as increased tumor control?
Abstract
Clinically defined groups of tumors are usually characterized by shallow dose-response curves, and this results from heterogeneity among individual dose-response curves, each of which is very likely quite steep. A review of published results for human tumors indicates that a 10% escalation of dose to tumors controlled at the 50% level, where changes in outcome are most likely to be detected, will be detectable in a population of unselected patients only in sizable clinical trials (130-300 patients per dose level). With a few exceptions, a dose escalation of 20% will be detectable in much smaller trials (50-130 patients per dose level). Therefore, clinical trials of improved treatment modalities will be confounded by patient heterogeneity, and modest improvements may go undetected in all but the largest trials. Mathematical modeling was used to study the effect on the steepness of the dose-response curve of selecting patients on the basis of the radiosensitivity measure SF2 (surviving fraction at 2 Gy). If SF2 is a faithful predictor of response in a group of tumors, then heterogeneity could be reduced by excluding the patients with the most sensitive (controlled with near certainty) and most resistant (recurring with near certainty) tumors. The resulting "stochastic fraction" (tumors for which treatment outcome is probabilistic) would be characterized by a steep dose response, and the number of patients required to demonstrate the effect of dose escalation would be substantially reduced (by about 50%).
Similar articles
-
Clinical implications of heterogeneity of tumor response to radiation therapy.Radiother Oncol. 1992 Dec;25(4):251-60. doi: 10.1016/0167-8140(92)90244-o. Radiother Oncol. 1992. PMID: 1480770 Review.
-
Inter-tumor heterogeneity and radiation dose-control curves.Radiother Oncol. 1987 Apr;8(4):353-61. doi: 10.1016/s0167-8140(87)80186-x. Radiother Oncol. 1987. PMID: 3588999
-
Radiobiologic studies of radioimmunotherapy and external beam radiotherapy in vitro and in vivo in human renal cell carcinoma xenografts.Cancer. 1997 Dec 15;80(12 Suppl):2519-28. doi: 10.1002/(sici)1097-0142(19971215)80:12+<2519::aid-cncr26>3.3.co;2-t. Cancer. 1997. PMID: 9406705
-
[Dose-response relationship in radiotherapy: an evidence?].Cancer Radiother. 2003 Nov;7 Suppl 1:8s-14s. Cancer Radiother. 2003. PMID: 15124539 Review. French.
-
The effect of heterogeneity in tumor cell kinetics on radiation dose-response. An exploratory investigation of a plateau effect.Radiother Oncol. 1999 Jan;50(1):57-66. doi: 10.1016/s0167-8140(99)00014-6. Radiother Oncol. 1999. PMID: 10225558
Cited by
-
FDG PET during radiochemotherapy is predictive of outcome at 1 year in non-small-cell lung cancer patients: a prospective multicentre study (RTEP2).Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging. 2014 Jun;41(6):1057-65. doi: 10.1007/s00259-014-2687-9. Epub 2014 Feb 22. Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging. 2014. PMID: 24562641 Clinical Trial.
-
Functional imaging-guided carbon ion irradiation with simultaneous integrated boost for localized prostate cancer: study protocol for a phase II randomized controlled clinical trial.Trials. 2022 Nov 8;23(1):934. doi: 10.1186/s13063-022-06798-5. Trials. 2022. PMID: 36348363 Free PMC article.
-
The potential of intratumoural unsealed radioactive source therapy.Eur J Nucl Med. 2001 May;28(5):567-9. doi: 10.1007/s002590000380. Eur J Nucl Med. 2001. PMID: 11383859 No abstract available.
-
Risk-adaptive optimization: selective boosting of high-risk tumor subvolumes.Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys. 2006 Dec 1;66(5):1528-42. doi: 10.1016/j.ijrobp.2006.08.032. Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys. 2006. PMID: 17126211 Free PMC article.
-
Estimate of the impact of FDG-avidity on the dose required for head and neck radiotherapy local control.Radiother Oncol. 2014 Jun;111(3):340-7. doi: 10.1016/j.radonc.2014.03.018. Epub 2014 May 12. Radiother Oncol. 2014. PMID: 24833560 Free PMC article. Review.
Publication types
MeSH terms
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources