Cancers (Sep 2023)

Real-World Results of Stereotactic Body Radiotherapy for 399 Medically Operable Patients with Stage I Histology-Proven Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer

  • Hiroshi Onishi,
  • Yoshiyuki Shioyama,
  • Yasuo Matsumoto,
  • Yukinori Matsuo,
  • Akifumi Miyakawa,
  • Hideomi Yamashita,
  • Haruo Matsushita,
  • Masahiko Aoki,
  • Keiji Nihei,
  • Tomoki Kimura,
  • Hiromichi Ishiyama,
  • Naoya Murakami,
  • Kensei Nakata,
  • Atsuya Takeda,
  • Takashi Uno,
  • Takuma Nomiya,
  • Hiroshi Taguchi,
  • Yuji Seo,
  • Takafumi Komiyama,
  • Kan Marino,
  • Shinichi Aoki,
  • Masaki Matsuda,
  • Tomoko Akita,
  • Masahide Saito

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers15174382
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 17
p. 4382

Abstract

Read online

Surgery is the standard treatment for stage I non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC); however, no clear randomized trial demonstrates its superiority to stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) regarding survival. We aimed to retrospectively evaluate the treatment outcomes of SBRT in operable patients with stage I NSCLC using a large Japanese multi-institutional database to show real-world outcome. Exactly 399 patients (median age 75 years; 262 males and 137 females) with stage I (IA 292, IB 107) histologically proven NSCLC (adenocarcinoma 267, squamous cell carcinoma 96, others 36) treated at 20 institutions were reviewed. SBRT was prescribed at a total dose of 48–70 Gy in 4–10 fractions. The median follow-up period was 38 months. Local progression-free survival rates were 84.2% in all patients and 86.1% in the T1, 78.6% in T2, 89.2% in adenocarcinoma, and 70.5% in squamous cell subgroups. Overall 3-year survival rates were 77.0% in all patients: 90.7% in females, 69.6% in males, and 41.2% in patients with pulmonary interstitial changes. Fatal radiation pneumonitis was observed in two patients, all of whom had pulmonary interstitial changes. This real-world evidence will be useful in shared decision-making for optimal treatment, including SBRT for operable stage I NSCLC, particularly in older patients.

Keywords