Safety and efficacy of stereotactic body proton therapy for high-risk lung tumors Journal Article


Authors: McMillan, M. T.; Shepherd, A. F.; Kang, M.; Lin, L.; Shaverdian, N.; Wu, A. J.; Gelblum, D. Y.; Ohri, N.; Lazarev, S.; Xu, L.; Chhabra, A. M.; Hasan, S.; Choi, J. I.; Gomez, D. R.; Rimner, A.; Lin, H.; Simone, C. B. 2nd
Article Title: Safety and efficacy of stereotactic body proton therapy for high-risk lung tumors
Abstract: Purpose: Stereotactic body proton therapy (SBPT) is an emerging treatment strategy for lung tumors that aims to combine the excellent local control benefits of ultra-hypofractionation with the physical advantages of protons, which reduce the integral dose to organs at risk (OARs) compared to photons. To date, however, very little data delivering SBPT in 5 or fewer fractions to lung tumors have been reported. Given that photon stereotactic body radiation therapy can struggle to deliver ablative doses to high-risk tumors (i.e., central/ultra-central location, prior in-field radiation, tumor size >5 cm, or the presence of severe pulmonary comorbidities) while adhering to OAR dose constraints, we hypothesized that SBPT would be an effective alternative for patients with high-risk tumors. Methods and Materials: Twenty-seven high-risk patients with 29 lung tumors treated with SBPT at the New York Proton Center between December 2019 and November 2022 were retrospectively identified. Patients were divided into three major subgroups: early-stage non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), locally recurrent NSCLC, and metastatic cancer from lung cancer or other histologies. Patient characteristics were reported using descriptive statistics, actuarial methods were used to quantify disease control rates, and toxicities were scored using CTCAE v 5.0. Results: The most common high-risk indications for SBPT were central/ultra-central tumor location (69.0%), severe COPD (48.1%), reirradiation (44.4%), significant pulmonary fibrosis (22.2%), and large tumor size > 5 cm (18.5%). In total, 96.6% of tumors were fully covered by the prescription dose without compromising target coverage. Three-year actuarial rates of local control for early-stage NSCLC, locally recurrent NSCLC, and metastatic patients were 89%, 100%, and 43%, respectively. Three-year actuarial rates of regional control were 89%, 67%, and 86%. Three-year actuarial rates of distant metastasis-free survival were 79%, 100%, and 0%. Two patients (7.4%), both of whom had clinically significant baseline interstitial lung disease and pre-treatment continuous oxygen demand, experienced grade ≥2 pulmonary toxicity (1 grade 3, 1 grade 5). There were no acute or late grade ≥2 toxicities related to esophagitis, cardiac injury, airway injury, pulmonary fibrosis, bronchopulmonary hemorrhage or brachial plexopathy. Conclusions: In the largest study of proton SBRT reported to date, SBPT has a favorable toxicity profile while being an effective approach for treating most high-risk tumors without requiring dose de-escalation or compromising tumor coverage and warrants further investigation. © 2023 Old City Publishing, Inc.
Keywords: lung cancer; stereotactic body radiation therapy; proton therapy; stereotactic ablative radiotherapy; thoracic malignancies; pencil beam scanning
Journal Title: Journal of Radiosurgery and SBRT
Volume: 9
Issue: 1
ISSN: 2156-4639
Publisher: Old City Publishing Inc  
Date Published: 2023-01-01
Start Page: 63
End Page: 74
Language: English
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC10681142
PUBMED: 38029007
DOI/URL:
Notes: The MSK Cancer Center Support Grant (P30 CA008748) is acknowledge in the PDF -- Corresponding authors is MSK author: Charles B. Simone -- Source: Scopus
Citation Impact
MSK Authors
  1. Daphna Y Gelblum
    228 Gelblum
  2. Daniel R Gomez
    242 Gomez
  3. Andreas Rimner
    527 Rimner
  4. Abraham Jing-Ching Wu
    404 Wu
  5. Annemarie Fernandes Shepherd
    103 Shepherd
  6. Charles Brian Simone
    195 Simone
  7. Jehee Isabelle Choi
    72 Choi
  8. Haibo Lin
    21 Lin