Modelling Radiation-Induced Salivary Dysfunction during IMRT and Chemotherapy for Nasopharyngeal Cancer Patients

被引:4
作者
Cavallo, Anna [1 ]
Iacovelli, Nicola Alessandro [2 ]
Facchinetti, Nadia [2 ,3 ]
Rancati, Tiziana [4 ]
Alfieri, Salvatore [5 ,6 ]
Giandini, Tommaso [1 ]
Cicchetti, Alessandro [4 ]
Fallai, Carlo [2 ]
Ingargiola, Rossana [2 ,7 ]
Licitra, Lisa [5 ,8 ]
Locati, Laura [5 ]
Cavalieri, Stefano [5 ]
Pignoli, Emanuele [1 ]
Romanello, Domenico Attilio [2 ]
Valdagni, Riccardo [4 ,8 ,9 ]
Orlandi, Ester [2 ,7 ]
机构
[1] Fdn IRCCS Ist Nazl Tumori, Dept Med Phys, I-20133 Milan, Italy
[2] Fdn IRCCS Ist Nazl Tumori, Dept Radiat Oncol 2, I-20133 Milan, Italy
[3] Natl Ctr Oncol Hadrontherapy CNAO, Clin Trial Ctr, I-27100 Pavia, Italy
[4] Fdn IRCCS Ist Nazl Tumori, Prostate Canc Program, I-20133 Milan, Italy
[5] Fdn IRCCS Ist Nazl Tumori, Dept Med Oncol 3, I-20133 Milan, Italy
[6] Ctr Riferimento Oncol Aviano PN CRO IRCCS, Dept Med Oncol, I-33018 Aviano, Italy
[7] Natl Ctr Oncol Hadrontherapy CNAO, Radiat Oncol Clin Dept, I-27100 Pavia, Italy
[8] Univ Milan, Dept Oncolgy & Hematooncol, I-20122 Milan, Italy
[9] Fdn IRCCS Ist Nazl Tumori, Dept Radiat Oncol 1, I-20133 Milan, Italy
关键词
nasopharyngeal cancer; radiotherapy; acute toxicity; NTCP modelling; validation; INTENSITY-MODULATED RADIOTHERAPY; 3-DIMENSIONAL CONFORMAL RADIOTHERAPY; NECK-CANCER; STICKY SALIVA; RATED XEROSTOMIA; NTCP MODELS; QUANTEC CRITERIA; EARLY PREDICTION; LATE TOXICITIES; ORAL MUCOSITIS;
D O I
10.3390/cancers13163983
中图分类号
R73 [肿瘤学];
学科分类号
100214 ;
摘要
Simple Summary We built a predictive model for acute salivary dysfunction for nasopharyngeal cancer patients receiving combined treatment. The final aim was to provide a nomogram (with dosimetric and clinical risk factors) to help physicians in the streamline prevention and management of this acute side effect. No research has focused on predicting acute xerostomia so far. We do not know if models predicting late xerostomia can also be applied to acute xerostomia, since different pathogenesis is suggested for acute and late events. The model was tested in two independent external cohorts. Validation results highlighted that the dosimetric part of the predictive model was highly generalisable, with the clinical risk part still being a weak component. The good validation of the model's discriminative power and of the effect of the size of dosimetric factors created confidence for considering these factors while optimising radiotherapy. Background: Radiation-induced xerostomia is one of the most prevalent adverse effects of head and neck cancer treatment, and it could seriously affect patients' qualities of life. It results primarily from damage to the salivary glands, but its onset and severity may also be influenced by other patient-, tumour-, and treatment-related factors. We aimed to build and validate a predictive model for acute salivary dysfunction (aSD) for locally advanced nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) patients by combining clinical and dosimetric factors. Methods: A cohort of consecutive NPC patients treated curatively with IMRT and chemotherapy at 70 Gy (2-2.12 Gy/fraction) were utilised. Parotid glands (cPG, considered as a single organ) and the oral cavity (OC) were selected as organs-at-risk. The aSD was assessed at baseline and weekly during RT, grade >= 2 aSD chosen as the endpoint. Dose-volume histograms were reduced to the Equivalent Uniform Dose (EUD). Dosimetric and clinical/treatment features selected via LASSO were inserted into a multivariable logistic model. Model validation was performed on two cohorts of patients with prospective aSD, and scored using the same schedule/scale: a cohort (NPC_V) of NPC patients (as in model training), and a cohort of mixed non-NPC head and neck cancer patients (HNC_V). Results: The model training cohort included 132 patients. Grade >= 2 aSD was reported in 90 patients (68.2%). Analyses resulted in a 4-variables model, including doses of up to 98% of cPG (cPG_D98%, OR = 1.04), EUD to OC with n = 0.05 (OR = 1.11), age (OR = 1.08, 5-year interval) and smoking history (OR = 1.37, yes vs. no). Calibration was good. The NPC_V cohort included 38 patients, with aSD scored in 34 patients (89.5%); the HNC_V cohort included 93 patients, 77 with aSD (92.8%). As a general observation, the incidence of aSD was significantly different in the training and validation populations (p = 0.01), thus impairing calibration-in-the-large. At the same time, the effect size for the two dosimetric factors was confirmed. Discrimination was also satisfactory in both cohorts: AUC was 0.73, and 0.68 in NPC_V and HNC_V cohorts, respectively. Conclusion: cPG D98% and the high doses received by small OC volumes were found to have the most impact on grade >= 2 acute xerostomia, with age and smoking history acting as a dose-modifying factor. Findings on the development population were confirmed in two prospectively collected validation populations.
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