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Assessment of Radiation-Induced Optic Neuropathy in a Multi-Institutional Cohort of Chordoma and Chondrosarcoma Patients Treated with Proton Therapy

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Proton therapy is an effective therapeutic option for the treatment of skull-base tumors that require high radiation doses to be controlled. On rare occasions, patients suffer from radiation-induced optic neuropathy (RION) to the detriment of their post-treatment quality-of-life. We...

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Autores principales: Köthe, Andreas, Feuvret, Loïc, Weber, Damien Charles, Safai, Sairos, Lomax, Antony John, Fattori, Giovanni
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8582447/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34771490
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers13215327
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author Köthe, Andreas
Feuvret, Loïc
Weber, Damien Charles
Safai, Sairos
Lomax, Antony John
Fattori, Giovanni
author_facet Köthe, Andreas
Feuvret, Loïc
Weber, Damien Charles
Safai, Sairos
Lomax, Antony John
Fattori, Giovanni
author_sort Köthe, Andreas
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Proton therapy is an effective therapeutic option for the treatment of skull-base tumors that require high radiation doses to be controlled. On rare occasions, patients suffer from radiation-induced optic neuropathy (RION) to the detriment of their post-treatment quality-of-life. We have collected multi-institutional data of 289 skull-base patients having received high doses to the optic apparatus from proton therapy or proton–photon mixed treatments and have observed a RION incidence rate (all grades) of 4.2% (12). We have furthermore confirmed older age and hypertension as risk factors for the onset of this side effect, with tumor involvement or its proximity to the optic apparatus and repeated surgical procedures showing moderate association. Our findings were consolidated into a NTCP model that can support pre-treatment patient segmentation into risk groups and the planning of necessary treatment countermeasures. However, further data and validation are necessary to confirm validity of the model. ABSTRACT: Radiation-induced optic neuropathy (RION) is a rare side effect following radiation therapy involving the optic structures whose onset is, due to the low amount of available data, challenging to predict. We have analyzed a multi-institutional cohort including 289 skull-base cancer patients treated with proton therapy who all received >45 Gy(RBE) to the optic apparatus. An overall incidence rate of 4.2% (12) was observed, with chordoma patients being at higher risk (5.8%) than chondrosarcoma patients (3.2%). Older age and arterial hypertension, tumor involvement, and repeated surgeries (>3) were found to be associated with RION. Based on bootstrapping and cross-validation, a NTCP model based on age and hypertension was determined to be the most robust, showing good classification ability (AUC-ROC 0.77) and calibration on our dataset. We suggest the application of this model with a threshold of 6% to segment patients into low and high-risk groups before treatment planning. However, further data and external validation are warranted before clinical application.
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spelling pubmed-85824472021-11-12 Assessment of Radiation-Induced Optic Neuropathy in a Multi-Institutional Cohort of Chordoma and Chondrosarcoma Patients Treated with Proton Therapy Köthe, Andreas Feuvret, Loïc Weber, Damien Charles Safai, Sairos Lomax, Antony John Fattori, Giovanni Cancers (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Proton therapy is an effective therapeutic option for the treatment of skull-base tumors that require high radiation doses to be controlled. On rare occasions, patients suffer from radiation-induced optic neuropathy (RION) to the detriment of their post-treatment quality-of-life. We have collected multi-institutional data of 289 skull-base patients having received high doses to the optic apparatus from proton therapy or proton–photon mixed treatments and have observed a RION incidence rate (all grades) of 4.2% (12). We have furthermore confirmed older age and hypertension as risk factors for the onset of this side effect, with tumor involvement or its proximity to the optic apparatus and repeated surgical procedures showing moderate association. Our findings were consolidated into a NTCP model that can support pre-treatment patient segmentation into risk groups and the planning of necessary treatment countermeasures. However, further data and validation are necessary to confirm validity of the model. ABSTRACT: Radiation-induced optic neuropathy (RION) is a rare side effect following radiation therapy involving the optic structures whose onset is, due to the low amount of available data, challenging to predict. We have analyzed a multi-institutional cohort including 289 skull-base cancer patients treated with proton therapy who all received >45 Gy(RBE) to the optic apparatus. An overall incidence rate of 4.2% (12) was observed, with chordoma patients being at higher risk (5.8%) than chondrosarcoma patients (3.2%). Older age and arterial hypertension, tumor involvement, and repeated surgeries (>3) were found to be associated with RION. Based on bootstrapping and cross-validation, a NTCP model based on age and hypertension was determined to be the most robust, showing good classification ability (AUC-ROC 0.77) and calibration on our dataset. We suggest the application of this model with a threshold of 6% to segment patients into low and high-risk groups before treatment planning. However, further data and external validation are warranted before clinical application. MDPI 2021-10-23 /pmc/articles/PMC8582447/ /pubmed/34771490 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers13215327 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Köthe, Andreas
Feuvret, Loïc
Weber, Damien Charles
Safai, Sairos
Lomax, Antony John
Fattori, Giovanni
Assessment of Radiation-Induced Optic Neuropathy in a Multi-Institutional Cohort of Chordoma and Chondrosarcoma Patients Treated with Proton Therapy
title Assessment of Radiation-Induced Optic Neuropathy in a Multi-Institutional Cohort of Chordoma and Chondrosarcoma Patients Treated with Proton Therapy
title_full Assessment of Radiation-Induced Optic Neuropathy in a Multi-Institutional Cohort of Chordoma and Chondrosarcoma Patients Treated with Proton Therapy
title_fullStr Assessment of Radiation-Induced Optic Neuropathy in a Multi-Institutional Cohort of Chordoma and Chondrosarcoma Patients Treated with Proton Therapy
title_full_unstemmed Assessment of Radiation-Induced Optic Neuropathy in a Multi-Institutional Cohort of Chordoma and Chondrosarcoma Patients Treated with Proton Therapy
title_short Assessment of Radiation-Induced Optic Neuropathy in a Multi-Institutional Cohort of Chordoma and Chondrosarcoma Patients Treated with Proton Therapy
title_sort assessment of radiation-induced optic neuropathy in a multi-institutional cohort of chordoma and chondrosarcoma patients treated with proton therapy
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8582447/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34771490
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers13215327
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