State of the Art Radiotherapy for Pediatric Tumors Suzanne L. - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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State of the Art Radiotherapy for Pediatric Tumors Suzanne L. - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

State of the Art Radiotherapy for Pediatric Tumors Suzanne L. Wolden, MD Suzanne L. Wolden, MD Memorial Sloan- -Kettering Cancer Center Kettering Cancer Center Memorial Sloan Introduction Progress and success in pediatric oncology


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State of the Art Radiotherapy for Pediatric Tumors

Suzanne L. Wolden, MD Suzanne L. Wolden, MD Memorial Sloan Memorial Sloan-

  • Kettering Cancer Center

Kettering Cancer Center

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SLIDE 2

Introduction

  • Progress and success in pediatric oncology
  • Examples of low-tech and high-tech radiation

solutions in common pediatric cancers

– Hodgkin lymphoma – Neuroblastoma – Rhabdomyosarcoma – Medulloblastoma

  • Global perspective
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Distribution of pediatric malignancies

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Pediatric cancer cure rates

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Evolution of radiation techniques

  • External beam radiation therapy

– Co-60 2D linac 3D treatment – Stereotactic radiosurgery – Intensity modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) – Protons, electrons, other particles – Image guided radiation therapy (IGRT)

  • Brachytherapy

– Permanent seeds – Remote afterloading: LDR -> HDR – Intraoperative radiation therapy (IORT)

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7 year old boy with Hodgkin lymphoma from Reed’s 1902 paper

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1970 1995 2009 Total Lymphoid Irradiation (TLI) 44 Gy Involved-Field Radiation (IFRT) 21 Gy Involved Node Radiation (INRT) 21 Gy

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CCG 5942 Hodgkin lymphoma trial

  • Chemotherapy by stage of disease
  • Randomization +/- 21 Gy IFRT
  • Study closed at 1st interim analysis

– 3 year EFS 93% vs 85% favoring RT (p<.01) – all subgroups benefitted from radiation

Nachman et al. JCO 20:3765, 2002

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Hodgkin lymphoma techniques

  • Advances in imaging (PET) have

significantly impacted RT field design

  • IMRT and protons have no obvious benefit
  • ver AP/PA fields for most cases
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Neuroblastoma

  • 650 cases per year in U.S.
  • Majority of patients are < 5 years of age
  • Radiation is used for primary site, lymph nodes,

and bone metastases in high risk patients

  • Local control 90% at primary site with RT
  • Most effective palliative therapy for metastases

Kushner et al., JCO (2001) 19:2821-28

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Stage 4 neuroblastoma (>1 year age): treatment outcome

Months from diagnosis

250 200 150 100 50

Proportion alive progression-free

1.2 1.0 .8 .6 .4 .2 0.0

N7=CAV/PV + 131I-3F8 + 3F8 N6=CAV/PV + 3F8 N5=CAV/PV + ABMT N4=CAV + ABMT N4 (80’s) N6 (89-94) N5 (87-89) N7 (94-99)

Cheung et al, Med Ped Onc 36:227, 2001

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Neuroblastoma: primary site 21 Gy

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Neuroblastoma bone metastases: Brain sparing whole skull RT

4 months

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Pretreatment right adrenal primary tumor Local recurrence after chemotherapy, surgery and 21 Gy external beam

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Intraoperative radiation therapy

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Rhabdomyosarcoma

  • The most radiosensitive sarcoma
  • Majority of patients (in the U.S.) receive RT

– Definitive local control for Group III – Post-operatively

  • Group I (alveolar or undifferentiated histology)
  • Group II (positive margins)
  • Group III (after second look surgery)
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Survival by treatment era

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Log Rank Test: p<0.001 Extremity GU B/P GU non-B/P H & N Orbit Other PM

Failure-free survival for local/regional tumors by primary site

0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1.0 Years 1 2 3 4 5 6 Failure-free Survival

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IRS IV (1991-1997)

  • 5-yr local control for Group III RMS

– Extremity 96% – Orbit 95% – Bladder/prostate 90% – Head and neck 88% – Parameningeal 84% – Other 90%.

Crist et al. JCO 19:3091, 2001 Donaldson et al. IJROBP 51:718, 2001

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RT for PM RMS at age 4 in 1978

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Failure-free survival for patients with Group III tumors by radiation schedule

Years Log Rank Test: p=0.76 Hyperfractionated 0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1.0 1 2 3 4 5 Conventional Failure-free Survival

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FDG-PET scan for staging MSKCC experience

  • 21 patients, 84 sites evaluated pre-treatment

– correlated with standard imaging and pathology – all primary tumors PET positive – sensitivity 81%

  • some missed nodal and bone metastases

– specificity 97% – Therapy altered in 3 of 21 (14%) cases

  • due to LN involvement detected only on PET

Klem et al. J Pediatr Hematol Oncol 29:9, 2007

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  • 2 year old with alveolar

rhabdomyosarcoma of the left thigh.

  • PET scan shows pelvic

node involvement

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IRS V (1999-2004)

  • Experimental dose reductions for selected patients:

– Group I alveolar/undifferentiated: 41.1 -> 36 Gy – Group II N0: 41.4 -> 36 Gy – Group III orbit/eyelid: 50.4 -> 45 Gy – Group III “second look surgery” – negative margins: 50.5 -> 36 Gy – microscopically + margins: 50.4 -> 41.4 Gy – Group III requiring 50.4: eligible for “conedown”

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IMRT for H&N rhabdomyosarcoma

  • 28 patients, median age 8 (1-29) years
  • Primary sites

– 21 parameningeal

  • 71% with intracranial extension (ICE)

– 4 other head and neck and 3 orbit

  • Tumor greater than 5 cm: 57%
  • Involved regional lymph nodes: 25%

Wolden et al. IJROBP 61: 1432, 2005

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Local control with IMRT

10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 1 2 3 4 5 6 Years % Local Control p = 0.60

parameningeal

  • rbit/head &neck
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Fusion of CT, MRI, and PET Scans

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Infratemporal fossa with PM extension

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Results:

  • Improved dose conformality of protons spared most normal

tissues examined except for a few ipsilateral structures such as the parotid and cochlea.

Parameningeal RMS: Dose Comparison (IMRT v Protons)

(Kozak, Yock, in press IJROBP)

% Dose 105 100 80 60 40 20

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Bone sparing for soft tissue sarcoma

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Ewing sarcoma: Askin tumor + whole lung

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IMRT for Osteosarcoma of C2

100% 90% 70% 50% PTV Cord

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Whole Abdomen / Pelvis IMRT for DSRCT

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Whole Abdomen / Pelvis IMRT for DSRCT

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Lower Eyelid RMS

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Custom Eye Shield

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Electron set-up

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Extremity brachytherapy

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Interstitial Tongue Brachytherapy

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Medulloblastoma

  • Common brain tumor in the posterior fossa
  • Requires craniospinal radiation & chemotherapy
  • Survival is 60-85% depending upon stage
  • IMRT or protons can be used for the “boost” to

spare inner ears and other normal tissues

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Medulloblastoma

  • MRI w/ contrast of entire neural axis
  • Lumbar puncture
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Medulloblastoma boost

2D 3D IMRT

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Medulloblastoma: cochlea dose

IMRT 2D 3D

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Craniospinal RT with protons

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Intrathecal radioimmunotherapy

  • Anti-GD2 IgG2 Ab (3F8)

conjugated to 131I

  • IT by Ommaya reservoir
  • 2 mCi test dose, followed

by 10 mCi 7 days later

  • CSF dosimetry: 15-80 cGy/ mCi
  • 18 Gy CSI w/ IMRT tumor-bed

boost to 5400

  • Concurrent vincristine, then

vincristine, cisplatin, CCNU x 8

131I

Kramer K, et al. JCO, 2007

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Image-guided radiotherapy (IGRT)

  • Respiratory Gating
  • Diagnostic level X-rays

– KV plain films – Fluoroscopy

  • Cone-beam CT
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Radiosurgery: Cyberknife

Synchrony™ camera Treatment couch

Synchrony™ camera Treatment couch Linear accelerator Manipulator Image detectors X-ray sources

Robotic Delivery System

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Conclusions

  • Radiation therapy plays a vital role in treating

childhood cancer.

  • New radiation technologies promise improve

tumor control with fewer late effects.

  • Older techniques remain useful in many cases.
  • Access to treatment is limited for the majority
  • f the world’s children.
  • Cost-effectiveness of new therapies and global

resource allocation is a critical issue.

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Suzanne L. Wolden, MD Dept of Radiation Oncology Memorial Sloan-Kettering 1275 York Avenue New York, NY 10021 Phone: 212-639-5148 E-mail: woldens@mskcc.org