Objective: concomitant chemoirradiation with cisplatinum and intracavitary brachytherapy (BT) is the standard of care in patients with locally advanced cervix cancer.Treatment planning for BT provides for the use of three dimensional imaging, such as CT scan or MRI.Positron emission Tomography with [ 18 F] FDG currently used in staging and restaging of this malignancy, is an imaging modality that can aid in image-guided radiation treatment planning.The purpose of our feasibility study was to compare two tumour volumes during BT planning, the CT-based and PET/CT-based clinical target volume (CTVs), in order to evaluate the value of functional imaging in BT planning and if it could be related to a CT standard data set.Moreover a correlation with some clinical data after a median follow up of 47 months is reported.Methods: From June 2007 to May 2010, thirteen women with advanced cervical carcinoma were enrolled into the study.All the patients had a pretreatment PET/CT for staging.All BT fractions have been planned by CT scan and, in the first (BT1) and in the fourth fraction (BT4), FDG-PET/CT was also employed.Two volumes (CTVs) were defined: a CTV standard , based on clinical information and on CT scan; and a CTV PET-influenced , created with the additional information brought by PET scan. Results:We compared the dimension of the two volumes and the intersection of CTV standard and CTV PET-influenced at BT1 and BT4.A non-parametric sum rank test was used to determine the statistical significance for comparison of the two series of volumes (CTV standard and CTV PET-influenced at BT1 and BT4).All patients completed the protocol, but out of 26 attempts of double CTV definition , only for 21 cases a comparison between CTV standard and CTV PET-influenced was made.For two patients at the first BT fraction PET was negative.In the 21 valuable cases, considering both fractions together (BT1 and BT4), the difference between CTV standard (25.8 ± 7.5 ml) and CTV PET-influenced (21.6 ± 9.5 ml) was statistically significant (p=0.01).In our small population the changes of GTV PET was unpredictable with residual tracer uptake areas often located far from the applicator and not consistent with clinical evaluation and or CT information. Conclusions:Even if the results of the study are preliminary because of the limited number of patients, our data suggests that PET scan cannot be used to define target volume in BT plan as the only source of information.It could be necessary an integration preferably with MRI for much more individualized brachytherapy treatment.
After the discovery of its essential role in anticancer immunity, IL-2 cancer immunotherapy has shown that comparable results may be obtained with different schedules, including intravenous high-dose IL-2 as a bolus or as a 24-hour intravenous infusion or prolonged subcutaneous injection of low-dose IL-2 with or without IFN-α. This study shows the long-term results obtained in 92 metastatic renal cell cancer (RCC) patients with low-dose subcutaneous IL-2, which was given at 3 million IU twice/day for 5 days/week for 6 consecutive weeks. In nonprogressing patients, a second cycle was planned after a 21-day rest period, followed by maintenance therapy consisting of 5 days of treatment every month until disease progression. Complete response (CR) was achieved in only 2/92 (2%) patients, and partial response (PR) was observed in 19 patients (21%). Therefore, the response rate (CR + PR) was 21/92 (23%), with a median duration of response of 25 months. Stable disease (SD) occurred in 37 patients (40%), whereas the other 34 (37%) had a progressive disease (PD). The response rate was significantly higher in patients with a disease-free interval of >1 year than in those with a lower interval, in patients with a high performance status (PS) than in those with a low PS, and in patients with sites of disease other than the liver. A 5-year survival was obtained in 9/92 (9%) patients, and the percent of survival was significantly higher in patients with a response or SD than in those with PD. The treatment was well tolerated in all patients. This study confirms that low-dose subcutaneous IL-2 alone in an effective and well tolerated therapy of metastatic RCC, with results comparable to those described with more aggressive and toxic IL-2 schedules.
Aims and Background The theraputic role of chemotherapy in advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is controversial because of its potentially detrimental action on host anticancer defenses. On the contrary, IL-2 would seem to prolong survival time by improving the immune status, even though it is generally less effective in determining tumor regression in NSCLC. Our previous studies have suggested the possibility of increasing tumor sensitivity to IL-2 by concomitant administration of immunomodulating neurohormones, such as the pineal hormone melatonin (MLT). On this basis, a study was carried out to evaluate the efficacy of immunotherapy with low-dose IL-2 plus MLT versus chemotherapy in advanced NSCLC. Methods The study included 60 patients with locally advanced or metastatic NSCLC, who were randomized to receive immunotherapy or chemotherapy. The immunotherapy consisted of IL-2 (3 million IU/day subcutaneously for 6 days/week for 4 weeks) and MLT (40 mg/day orally every day, starting 7 days before IL-2); in nonprogressing patients, a second cycle was repeated after a 21-day rest period, then they underwent a maintenance period consisting of one week of therapy every month until progression. Chemotherapy consisted of cisplatin (20 mg/m 2 ) and etoposide (100 mg/m 2 )/day intravenously for 3 days; cycles of chemotherapy were repeated every 21 days until progression. Results No complete response was obtained. A partial response was achieved in 7/29 patients treated with chemotherapy and in 6/31 patients receiving chemotherapy. The difference was not significant. In contrast, the mean progression-free period and the percentage survival at 1 year was significantly higher in patients treated with immunotherapy than in those treated with chemotherapy. Toxicity was substantially lower in patients receiving immunotherapy than in those given chemotherapy. Conclusions This randomized study showed that immunotherapy with low-dose IL-2 plus MLT is a better tolerated and more effective therapy in terms of survival time than chemotherapy containing cisplatin in patients affected by advanced NSCLC.
To investigate the capability of a not-yet commercially available fully automated lexicographic optimization (LO) planning algorithm, called mCycle (Elekta AB, Stockholm, Sweden), to further improve the plan quality of an already-validated Wish List (WL) pushing on the organs-at-risk (OAR) sparing without compromising target coverage and plan delivery accuracy.Twenty-four mono-institutional consecutive cervical cancer Volumetric-Modulated Arc Therapy (VMAT) plans delivered between November 2019 and April 2022 (50 Gy/25 fractions) have been retrospectively selected. In mCycle the LO planning algorithm was combined with the a-priori multi-criterial optimization (MCO). Two versions of WL have been defined to reproduce manual plans (WL01), and to improve the OAR sparing without affecting minimum target coverage and plan delivery accuracy (WL02). Robust WLs have been tuned using a subset of 4 randomly selected patients. The remaining plans have been automatically re-planned by using the designed WLs. Manual plans (MP) and mCycle plans (mCP01 and mCP02) were compared in terms of dose distributions, complexity, delivery accuracy, and clinical acceptability. Two senior physicians independently performed a blind clinical evaluation, ranking the three competing plans. Furthermore, a previous defined global quality index has been used to gather into a single score the plan quality evaluation.The WL tweaking requests 5 and 3 working days for the WL01 and the WL02, respectively. The re-planning took in both cases 3 working days. mCP01 best performed in terms of target coverage (PTV V95% (%): MP 98.0 [95.6-99.3], mCP01 99.2 [89.7-99.9], mCP02 96.9 [89.4-99.5]), while mCP02 showed a large OAR sparing improvement, especially in the rectum parameters (e.g., Rectum D50% (Gy): MP 41.7 [30.2-47.0], mCP01 40.3 [31.4-45.8], mCP02 32.6 [26.9-42.6]). An increase in plan complexity has been registered in mCPs without affecting plan delivery accuracy. In the blind comparisons, all automated plans were considered clinically acceptable, and mCPs were preferred over MP in 90% of cases. Globally, automated plans registered a plan quality score at least comparable to MP.This study showed the flexibility of the Lexicographic approach in creating more demanding Wish Lists able to potentially minimize toxicities in RT plans.
Several experiments have suggested that the pineal hormone melatonin (MLT) may regulate cancer growth by exerting both oncostatic and immunomodulating effects. In particular, MLT would stimulate the anticancer immunity induced by interleukin-2 (IL-2). Recent studies seem to suggest that the activation of the inflammatory response may counteract the anticancer efficacy of IL-2 immunotherapy because of the immunosuppressive action of inflammatory-related cytokines, mainly IL-6. At present, it is still unknown whether MLT may influence host immune antitumor defences by modulating the inflammatory response. To analyze this hypothesis, we have evaluated the effects of a chronic administration of MLT on some of the commonly used markers of inflammation, including erythrosedimentation rate (ESR), IL-6, neopterin and SIL-2R, in patients with evidence of activation of the inflammatory response due to advanced solid neoplasms or auto-immune diseases. The study included 14 patients (solid tumors: 9; autoimmune diseases: 5). MLT was given orally at 20 mg/day during the dark phase of the day for 7 consecutive days. Mean serum levels of IL-6, neopterin and SIL-2R significantly decreased in both groups of patients. ESR values also decreased on therapy, without, however, significant differences. This preliminary study shows that the pineal hormone MLT may inhibit the acute inflammatory reaction. Therefore, because of the immunosuppressive section of inflammation-related cytokines, this study could suggest that MLT may contribute to the generation of the immune reaction against cancer at least in part by removing the immunosuppression related to the activation of the inflammatory response.
Abstract Aim Advances in therapy have resulted in improved cure rates and an increasing number of long-term Hodgkin's lymphoma (HL) survivors. However, radiotherapy (RT)-related late effects are still a significant issue, particularly for younger patients with mediastinal disease (secondary cancers, heart diseases). In many Centers, technological evolution has substantially changed RT planning and delivery. This consensus document aims to analyze the current knowledge of Intensity-Modulated Radiation Therapy (IMRT) and Image-Guided Radiation Therapy (IGRT) for mediastinal HL and formulate practical recommendations based on scientific evidence and expert opinions. Methods A dedicated working group was set up within the Fondazione Italiana Linfomi (FIL) Radiotherapy Committee in May 2018. After a first meeting, the group adopted a dedicated platform to share retrieved articles and other material. Two group coordinators redacted a first document draft, that was further discussed and finalized in two subsequent meetings. Topics of interest were: 1) Published data comparing 3D-conformal radiotherapy (3D-CRT) and IMRT 2) dose objectives for the organs at risk 3) IGRT protocols and motion management. Results Data review showed that IMRT might allow for an essential reduction in the high-dose regions for all different thoracic OAR. As very few studies included specific dose constraints for lungs and breasts, the low-dose component for these OAR resulted slightly higher with IMRT vs. 3D-CRT, depending on the technique used. We propose a set of dose objectives for the heart, breasts, lungs, and thyroid. The use of IGRT is advised for margin reduction without specific indications, such as the use of breath-holding techniques. An individual approach, including comparative planning and considering different risk factors for late morbidity, is recommended for each patient. Conclusions As HL therapy continues to evolve, with an emphasis on treatment reduction, radiation oncologists should use at best all the available tools to minimize the dose to organs at risk and optimize treatment plans. This document provides indications on the use of IMRT/IGRT based on expert consensus, providing a basis for clinical implementation and future development.