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Development of Radiographic Radiation Pneumonitis (RP) in Non-small Cell Lung Cancer Patients Treated With Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy (SBRT) May Be Protective Against Further Disease Progression
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Development of Radiographic Radiation Pneumonitis (RP) in Non-small Cell Lung Cancer Patients Treated With Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy (SBRT) May Be Protective Against Further Disease Progression

Colten Wolf, Matthew Harkenrider, Kyle Stang, Michael Wesolowski and Fiori Alite
Curēus (Palo Alto, CA), Vol.14(6), p.e25994
06/16/2022
PMID: 35859984

Abstract

General & Internal Medicine Life Sciences & Biomedicine Medicine, General & Internal Science & Technology
Objectives: Radiation pneumonitis (RP) is a local inflammatory response, and we hypothesize that RP serves as an immune stimulator and is a protective factor against disease progression. Methods: We analyzed patients with early-stage non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) treated with stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) at two institutions. Radiographic RP (RRP) was evaluated and maximal axial dimensions were measured at three-, six-, and twelve-month timepoints with surveillance CT. RRP was measured using radiographic markers such as ground-glass opacities and airspace consolidation. Disease recurrence was evaluated and categorized as local, regional, and distant. Results: Seventy-seven unique patient records were randomly selected from the database, 72 patients (93.5%) had RRP and five patients (6.5%) did not. The median follow-up was 24.3 months (IQR: 12.0 - 41.9). Disease failure occurred in 28.6% of patients with 6.5% local only, 2.6% regional only, 7.8% distant only, and 11.7% with multiple recurrences. Patients with RRP demonstrated a lower rate of disease failure with 25.0% of those with RRP experiencing disease failure and 80% of those without RRP experiencing disease failure (p=0.02). Patients with RRP had a 71% reduced risk of disease recurrence, compared to patients with no RRP, after adjusting for maximum tumor dimension (HR 0.29, p = 0.05). Among patients with RRP, there was no significant difference in recurrence based on extent of RRP (maximal area of RRP on CT). RRP did not correlate with overall survival. Discussion: Most patients who received SBRT had RRP, and this study suggests that it may be protective of cancer recurrence. These results are hypothesis-generating and will need to be validated in larger and independent datasets.
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https://doi.org/10.7759/cureus.25994View
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