Prophylactic cranial irradiation

Prophylactic cranial irradiation (PCI) is a technique used to combat the occurrence of metastasis to the brain in highly aggressive cancers that commonly metastasize to brain, most notably small-cell lung cancer.[1] Radiation therapy is commonly used to treat known tumor occurrence in the brain, either with highly precise stereotactic radiation or therapeutic cranial irradiation. By contrast, PCI is intended as preemptive treatment in patients with no known current intracranial tumor, but with high likelihood for harboring occult microscopic disease and eventual occurrence.[2] For small-cell lung cancer with limited[3][4] and select cases of extensive disease,[5] PCI has shown to reduce recurrence of brain metastases and improve overall survival in complete remission.

Prophylactic cranial irradiation
Other namesProphylactic cranial radiotherapy
ICD-9-CM92.21

History

During the fervor to develop treatments for pediatric leukemia in the 1960s, there was initial experimentation with PCI for children with ALL. Although advances in chemotherapy had been able to successfully treat tumor throughout the body, there remained an alarming incidence of brain metastasis following systemic chemotherapy. A theory was developed that the brain was likely a pharmacologic sanctuary where sub-clinical metastases were protected from cytotoxic drugs by the blood–brain barrier. Oncologists hypothesized that treatment of this sub-clinical disease with radiation therapy may stamp out the malignant process before it could advance to cause symptoms. Indeed, subsequent studies showed that an increased rate of disease-free survival and overall survival in those children treated with PCI. Due to successes with pediatric blood cancers, the concept of PCI was enlisted for the treatment of other types of cancers.

Over time, there has slowly been a shift away from PCI due to incidence of long-term side effects and secondary cancers, as well as evidence of equivalent control with alternate forms of treatment such as long-term intrathecal chemotherapy.[6] For ALL, PCI had been reserved only for high-risk cases; however, a 2009 study by Ching-Hon et al. reporting on the results of clinical trial NCT00137111 suggesting that PCI is unwarranted even in high-risk cases.[7] Despite changing recommendations for ALL, PCI continues to play an important role in treatment of small-cell lung cancer.

Dosing

Early trials for PCI in ALL utilized high-dose treatments, up to 24 Gy cumulative dose, that resulted in significant toxicity. Further experiments showed that lower-dose treatments (12–18 Gy)[8][9] administered in smaller fractions provide equivalent benefit with lower neuro-toxicity.

References

  1. Lee, JJ (Aug 2006). "Decision analysis for prophylactic cranial irradiation for patients with small-cell lung cancer". J Clin Oncol. 24 (22): 3597–603. doi:10.1200/JCO.2006.06.0632. PMID 16877726.
  2. "Fundamentals of Radiation Oncology". Perelman School of Medicine. UPenn: Department of Radiation Oncology. Retrieved 2014-08-30.
  3. Komaki R, Cox JD, Whitson W (1981). "Risk of brain metastasis from small cell carcinoma of the lung related to length of survival and prophylactic irradiation". Cancer Treat Rep. 65 (9–10): 811–4. PMID 6268295.
  4. Aupérin A, Arriagada R, Pignon JP, et al. (1999). "Prophylactic cranial irradiation for patients with small-cell lung cancer in complete remission. Prophylactic Cranial Irradiation Overview Collaborative Group". NEJM. 341 (7): 476–84. doi:10.1056/NEJM199908123410703. PMID 10441603.
  5. Slotman B, Faivre-Finn C, Kramer G, et al. (2007). "Prophylactic cranial irradiation in extensive small-cell lung cancer". NEJM. 357 (7): 664–672. doi:10.1056/nejmoa071780. PMID 17699816. S2CID 7086495.
  6. Clarke M, Gaynon P, Hann I, et al. (2003). "CNS-directed therapy for childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia: Childhood ALL Collaborative Group overview of 43 randomized trials". J Clin Oncol. 21 (9): 1798–809. doi:10.1200/jco.2003.08.047. PMID 12721257.
  7. Ching-Hon; et al. (Jun 25, 2009). "Treating Childhood Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia without Cranial Irradiation". NEJM. 360 (26): 2730–2741. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa0900386. PMC 2754320. PMID 19553647.
  8. Schrappe; et al. (Jun 1, 2000). "Improved outcome in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia despite reduced use of anthracyclines and cranial radiotherapy: results of trial ALL-BFM 90. German-Austrian-Swiss ALL-BFM Study Group". Blood. 95 (11): 3310–22. PMID 10828010.
  9. Waber; et al. (Jul 1, 2001). "Excellent therapeutic efficacy and minimal late neurotoxicity in children treated with 18 grays of cranial radiation therapy for high-risk acute lymphoblastic leukemia: a 7-year follow-up study of the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute Consortium Protocol 87-01". Cancer. 92 (1): 15–22. doi:10.1002/1097-0142(20010701)92:1<15::aid-cncr1286>3.0.co;2-w. PMID 11443604.
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