Radiat Oncol J.  2014 Mar;32(1):31-42. 10.3857/roj.2014.32.1.31.

PET/CT planning during chemoradiotherapy for esophageal cancer

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Radiation Oncology, Kyungpook National University School of Medicine, Daegu, Korea. jelee@knu.ac.kr

Abstract

PURPOSE
To evaluate the usefulness of positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) for field modification during radiotherapy in esophageal cancer.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
We conducted a retrospective study on 33 patients that underwent chemoradiotherapy (CRT). Pathologic findings were squamous cell carcinoma in 32 patients and adenocarcinoma in 1 patient. All patients underwent PET/CT scans before and during CRT (after receiving 40 Gy and before a 20 Gy boost dose). Response evaluation was determined by PET/CT using metabolic tumor volume (MTV), total glycolytic activity (TGA), MTV ratio (rMTV) and TGA ratio (rTGA), or determined by CT. rMTV and rTGA were reduction ratio of MTV and TGA between before and during CRT, respectively.
RESULTS
Significant decreases in MTV (MTV2.5: mean 70.09%, p < 0.001) and TGA (TGA2.5: mean 79.08%, p<0.001) were found between before and during CRT. Median rMTV2.5 was 0.299 (range, 0 to 0.98) and median rTGA2.5 was 0.209 (range, 0 to 0.92). During CRT, PET/CT detected newly developed distant metastasis in 1 patient, and this resulted in a treatment strategy change. At a median 4 months (range, 0 to 12 months) after completion of CRT, 8 patients (24.2%) achieved clinically complete response, 11 (33.3%) partial response, 5 (15.2%) stable disease, and 9 (27.3%) disease progression. SUVmax (p = 0.029), rMTV50% (p = 0.016), rMTV75% (p = 0.023) on intra-treatment PET were found to correlate with complete clinical response.
CONCLUSION
PET/CT during CRT can provide additional information useful for radiotherapy planning and offer the potential for tumor response evaluation during CRT. rMTV50% during CRT was found to be a useful predictor of clinical response.

Keyword

Esophageal cancer; PET/CT; CCRT; Radiotherapy planning

MeSH Terms

Adenocarcinoma
Carcinoma, Squamous Cell
Chemoradiotherapy*
Disease Progression
Electrons
Esophageal Neoplasms*
Humans
Neoplasm Metastasis
Positron-Emission Tomography and Computed Tomography*
Radiotherapy
Retrospective Studies
Tumor Burden
Full Text Links
  • ROJ
Actions
Cited
CITED
export Copy
Close
Share
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
Similar articles
Copyright © 2024 by Korean Association of Medical Journal Editors. All rights reserved.     E-mail: koreamed@kamje.or.kr