Modeling the risk of radiation-induced acute esophagitis for combined Washington University and RTOG trial 93-11 lung cancer patients Journal Article


Authors: Huang, E. X.; Bradley, J. D.; El Naqa, I.; Hope, A. J.; Lindsay, P. E.; Bosch, W. R.; Matthews, J. W.; Sause, W. T.; Graham, M. V.; Deasy, J. O.
Article Title: Modeling the risk of radiation-induced acute esophagitis for combined Washington University and RTOG trial 93-11 lung cancer patients
Abstract: Purpose: To construct a maximally predictive model of the risk of severe acute esophagitis (AE) for patients who receive definitive radiation therapy (RT) for non-small-cell lung cancer. Methods and Materials: The dataset includes Washington University and RTOG 93-11 clinical trial data (events/patients: 120/374, WUSTL = 101/237, RTOG9311 = 19/137). Statistical model building was performed based on dosimetric and clinical parameters (patient age, sex, weight loss, pretreatment chemotherapy, concurrent chemotherapy, fraction size). A wide range of dose-volume parameters were extracted from dearchived treatment plans, including Dx, Vx, MOHx (mean of hottest x% volume), MOCx (mean of coldest x% volume), and gEUD (generalized equivalent uniform dose) values. Results: The most significant single parameters for predicting acute esophagitis (RTOG Grade 2 or greater) were MOH85, mean esophagus dose (MED), and V30. A superior-inferior weighted dose-center position was derived but not found to be significant. Fraction size was found to be significant on univariate logistic analysis (Spearman R = 0.421, p < 0.00001) but not multivariate logistic modeling. Cross-validation model building was used to determine that an optimal model size needed only two parameters (MOH85 and concurrent chemotherapy, robustly selected on bootstrap model-rebuilding). Mean esophagus dose (MED) is preferred instead of MOH85, as it gives nearly the same statistical performance and is easier to compute. AE risk is given as a logistic function of (0.0688 * MED+1.50 * ConChemo-3.13), where MED is in Gy and ConChemo is either 1 (yes) if concurrent chemotherapy was given, or 0 (no). This model correlates to the observed risk of AE with a Spearman coefficient of 0.629 (p < 0.000001). Conclusions: Multivariate statistical model building with cross-validation suggests that a two-variable logistic model based on mean dose and the use of concurrent chemotherapy robustly predicts acute esophagitis risk in combined-data WUSTL and RTOG 93-11 trial datasets. © 2012 Elsevier Inc.
Keywords: radiotherapy; lung cancer; ntcp; acute esophagitis
Journal Title: International Journal of Radiation Oncology, Biology, Physics
Volume: 82
Issue: 5
ISSN: 0360-3016
Publisher: Elsevier Inc.  
Date Published: 2012-04-01
Start Page: 1674
End Page: 1679
Language: English
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijrobp.2011.02.052
PROVIDER: scopus
PUBMED: 21658856
PMCID: PMC3783997
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Export Date: 2 April 2012" - "CODEN: IOBPD" - "Source: Scopus"
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  1. Joseph Owen Deasy
    524 Deasy