Preoperative versus postoperative radiotherapy for locally advanced gastroesophageal junction and proximal gastric cancers: A comparison of normal tissue radiation doses Journal Article


Authors: Tillman, G. F.; Pawlicki, T.; Koong, A. C.; Goodman, K. A.
Article Title: Preoperative versus postoperative radiotherapy for locally advanced gastroesophageal junction and proximal gastric cancers: A comparison of normal tissue radiation doses
Abstract: Locoregional relapse occurs in over half of gastric cancer patients who undergo potentially curative resection. Adjuvant chemoradiation reduces locoregional relapse, but often requires irradiating large fields and is limited by poor patient tolerance. This study explores the potential dosimetric benefit in reducing the radiation dose to normal structures by treating gastroesophageal (GE) junction/proximal gastric cancers with preoperative rather than adjuvant radiotherapy. Five cases of GE junction/proximal gastric cancer patients treated postoperatively with curative intent were selected. The actual target contours were then modified to reflect hypothetical target volumes which would have been used had the patients been treated preoperatively. Hypothetical preoperative treatment plans were generated for each patient based on these modified contours. The hypothetical preoperative treatment plans were then compared to the actual postoperative plans with respect to dose-volume parameters including lung mean dose, lung V20, heart V20 and V30, and mean doses to abdominal structures. Target volumes were smaller with preoperative treatment, with an average reduction of 23%. Comparative dose-volume histogram (DVH) analysis showed the resultant composite lung doses were reduced in the preoperative plans by 50-79%. In all patients, the proportion of lungs receiving at least 20 Gy (V20) was substantially reduced using preoperative treatment (1.9% vs. 9.7% in the 3-D conformal patient; mean of 3.1% vs. 17.6% in the intensity modulated radiation therapy patients). Likewise, the volume of heart receiving at least 30 Gy was dramatically reduced in all preoperative plans (15.8% vs. 35.4%). Doses to the kidneys, liver and spinal cord were comparable in both approaches. Preoperative treatment of GE junction and proximal gastric cancer patients offers the potential to decrease the radiation dose received by normal thoracic structures. © 2008 International Society for Diseases of the Esophagus.
Keywords: clinical article; controlled study; treatment outcome; survival analysis; cancer localization; intensity modulated radiation therapy; postoperative period; advanced cancer; patient selection; treatment planning; postoperative care; preoperative care; follow-up studies; neoplasm staging; adenocarcinoma; neoplasm recurrence, local; radiotherapy dosage; time factors; risk assessment; abdomen; imrt; radiotherapy, intensity-modulated; dosimetry; probability; spinal cord; reference values; sampling studies; gastrectomy; stomach cancer; neoplasm invasiveness; radiotherapy, conformal; liver parenchyma; esophagus cancer; radiation dose distribution; stomach neoplasms; heart; kidney parenchyma; lower esophagus sphincter; histogram; esophagogastric junction; postoperative radiation; lung parenchyma; preoperative radiotherapy; preoperative chemoradiation; gastroesophageal junction tumors; proximal gastric cancer
Journal Title: Diseases of the Esophagus
Volume: 21
Issue: 5
ISSN: 1120-8694
Publisher: Oxford University Press  
Date Published: 2008-08-01
Start Page: 437
End Page: 444
Language: English
DOI: 10.1111/j.1442-2050.2007.00794.x
PUBMED: 19125798
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Cited By (since 1996): 1" - "Export Date: 17 November 2011" - "CODEN: DIESE" - "Source: Scopus"
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  1. Karyn A Goodman
    257 Goodman