Background: Despite intensive multimodal treatment, outcome of patients with malignant glioma remains poor, and a standard dose of radiotherapy for anaplastic astrocytoma has not been defined. In the past RTOG study (83-02), the arm of 72 Gy hyperfractionated radiotherapy (HFRT) for malignant gliomas showed better outcome than the arms of higher doses (76.8 - 81.6 Gy) and the arms of lower doses (48 - 54.4 Gy). The purpose of this study is to verify the efficacy of this protocol. Methods: From July 1995, 44 consecutive eligible patients with histologically proven anaplastic astrocytoma were enrolled in this study (HFRT group). The standard regimen in this protocol was post-operative radiotherapy of 72 Gy in 60 fractions (1.2 Gy/fraction, 2 fractions/day) with concurrent chemotherapy (weekly ACNU). The primary endpoint was local control rate (LCR), and the secondary endpoints were overall survival (OS), progression-free survival (PFS) and late toxicity. Results: Three-year OS of the HFRT group was 64.8% (95% confidence interval; 48.4-81.3%). Three-year PFS rate and LCR were 64.4% (95%CI: 48.4-80.3%) and 81.6% (95%CI: 69.2-94.8%), respectively. The number of failures at 5 years in the HFRT group were 14 (32%). The number of failures inside the irradiation field was only about half (50%) of all failures. One (2%) of the patients clinically diagnosed as brain necrosis due to radiation therapy. Conclusion: The results of this study suggested that 72 Gy HFRT seemed to show favorable outcome for patients with anaplastic astrocytoma with tolerable toxicity. © 2008 Nomiya et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
CITATION STYLE
Nomiya, T., Nemoto, K., Kumabe, T., Takai, Y., & Yamada, S. (2008). Prospective single-arm study of 72 Gy hyperfractionated radiation therapy and combination chemotherapy for anaplastic astrocytomas. BMC Cancer, 8. https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-8-11
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