Clinical and Translational Radiation Oncology (Sep 2019)

Chronic radiation-associated dysphagia in oropharyngeal cancer survivors: Towards age-adjusted dose constraints for deglutitive muscles

  • Kaitlin M. Christopherson,
  • Alokananda Ghosh,
  • Abdallah Sherif Radwan Mohamed,
  • Mona Kamal,
  • G. Brandon Gunn,
  • Timothy Dale,
  • Jayashree Kalpathy-Cramer,
  • Jay Messer,
  • Adam S. Garden,
  • Hesham Elhalawani,
  • Steven J. Frank,
  • Jan Lewin,
  • William H. Morrison,
  • Jack Phan,
  • Neil Gross,
  • Renata Ferrarotto,
  • Randal S. Weber,
  • David I. Rosenthal,
  • Stephen Y. Lai,
  • Katherine Hutcheson,
  • Clifton David Fuller,
  • Abdallah Sherif Radwan Mohamed,
  • G. Elisabeta (Liz) Marai,
  • Guadalupe Canahuate,
  • David M. Vock,
  • David Fuller

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18
pp. 16 – 22

Abstract

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Objectives: We sought to model chronic radiation-associated dysphagia (RAD) in patients given intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) for oropharyngeal squamous cell cancer (OPSCC) as a function of age and dose to non-target swallowing muscles. Methods: We reviewed 300 patients with T1-T4 N0-3 M0 OPSCC given definitive IMRT with concurrent chemotherapy. Chronic RAD was defined as aspiration or stricture on videoflouroscopy/endoscopy, gastrostomy tube, or aspiration pneumonia at ≥12 months after IMRT. Doses to autosegmented regions of interest (ROIs; inferior, middle and superior constrictors, anterior and posterior digastrics, mylo/geniohyoid complex, intrinsic tongue, and gengioglossus) were obtained from DICOM-RT plans and dose-volume histograms. The probability of chronic RAD as a function of mean ROI dose, stratified by age (<50, 50–59, 60–69, or ≥70 years), was estimated with logistic probability models and subsequent unsupervised nonlinear curves. Results: Chronic RAD was observed in 34 patients (11%). Age was a significant correlate of chronic RAD, both independently and with dose for all muscle groups examined. Distinct muscle-specific dose–response profiles were observed as a function of age (e.g., 5% of patients in their 50 s [but 20% of those 70 + ] who received 60 Gy to the superior constrictor had chronic RAD). This effect was stable across all observed muscle ROIs, with a false discovery rate-corrected p < 0.05, for all dose/muscle/age models, suggesting that including age as a covariate improves modeling of chronic RAD. Conclusions: Age at treatment moderates the probability of chronic RAD after chemo-IMRT for OPSCC, with aging muscles showing lower dose thresholds. Uniform dose constraints may not predict toxicity in older patients. Keywords: Oropharynx, IMRT, Radiation, Toxicity, Presbyphagia