Clinical and Dosimetric Predictors of Radiation Pneumonitis in a Large Series of Patients Treated With Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy to the Lung

2012 
Purpose To report clinical and dosimetric factors predictive of radiation pneumonitis (RP) in patients receiving lung stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) from a series of 240 patients. Methods and Materials Of the 297 isocenters treating 263 patients, 240 patients (n=263 isocenters) had evaluable information regarding RP. Age, gender, current smoking status and pack-years, O 2 use, Charlson Comorbidity Index, prior lung radiation therapy (yes/no), dose/fractionation, V 5 , V 13 , V 20 , V prescription , mean lung dose, planning target volume (PTV), total lung volume, and PTV/lung volume ratio were recorded. Results Twenty-nine patients (11.0%) developed symptomatic pneumonitis (26 grade 2, 3 grade 3). The mean V 20 was 6.5% (range, 0.4%-20.2%), and the average mean lung dose was 5.03 Gy (0.547-12.2 Gy). In univariable analysis female gender ( P =.0257) and Charlson Comorbidity index ( P =.0366) were significantly predictive of RP. Among dosimetric parameters, V 5 ( P =.0186), V 13 ( P =.0438), and V prescription (where dose=60 Gy) ( P =.0128) were significant. There was only a trend toward significance for V 20 ( P =.0610). Planning target volume/normal lung volume ratio was highly significant ( P =.0024). In multivariable analysis the clinical factors of female gender, pack-years smoking, and larger gross internal tumor volume and PTV were predictive ( P =.0094, .0312, .0364, and .052, respectively), but no dosimetric factors were significant. Conclusions Rate of symptomatic RP was 11%. Our mean lung dose was
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