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International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 2000

TREATMENT OF LOCALLY ADVANCED ADENOID CYSTIC CARCINOMA OF THE HEAD AND NECK WITH NEUTRON RADIOTHERAPY

James G. Douglas; George E. Laramore; Mary Austin-Seymour; Wui Jin Koh; Keith J. Stelzer; Thomas W. Griffin

PURPOSEnTo examine the efficacy of fast neutron radiotherapy for the treatment of locally advanced and/or recurrent adenoid cystic carcinoma of the head and neck and to identify prognostic variables associated with local-regional control and survival.nnnMETHODS AND MATERIALSnOne hundred fifty-nine patients with nonmetastatic, previously unirradiated, locally advanced, and/or recurrent adenoid cystic carcinoma (ACC) of the head and neck region were treated with fast neutron radiotherapy during the years 1985-1997. One hundred fifty-one patients had either unresectable disease, or gross residual disease (GRD) after an attempted surgical extirpation. Eight patients had microscopic residual disease and were analyzed separately. Sixty-two percent of patients had tumors arising in minor salivary glands, 29% in major salivary glands, and 9% in other sites such as the lacrimal glands, tracheal-bronchial tree, etc. Fifty-five percent of patients were treated for postsurgical recurrent disease and 13% of patients had lymph node involvement at the time of treatment. The median duration of follow-up was 32 months (range 3-142 months). Actuarial curves for survival, cause-specific survival, local-regional control, and the development of distant metastases are presented for times out to 11 years.nnnRESULTSnThe 5-year actuarial local-regional tumor control rate for the 151 patients with GRD was 57%; the 5-year actuarial overall survival rate was 72%; and the 5-year actuarial cause-specific survival rate was 77%. Variables associated with decreased local-regional control in the patients with GRD as determined by multivariate analysis included base of skull involvement (p < 0.01) and biopsy only versus an attempted surgical resection prior to treatment (p = 0.03). Patients without these negative factors had an actuarial local-regional control rate of 80% at 5 years. Patients with microscopic residual disease (n = 8) had a 5-year actuarial local-regional control rate of 100%. Base of skull involvement (p < 0.001), lymph node metastases at the time of treatment (p < 0.01), biopsy only prior to neutron radiotherapy (p = 0.03), and recurrent tumors (p = 0.04) were found to be associated with a diminished cause-specific survival as ascertained by multivariate analysis. Patients with base of skull involvement and positive lymph nodes at presentation had an increased rate of the development of distant metastases at 5 years, (p < 0.01 and p < 0.001, respectively). No statistical difference in outcome was observed between major and minor salivary gland sites.nnnCONCLUSIONSnFast neutron radiotherapy is an effective treatment for locally advanced ACC of the head and neck region with acceptable toxicity. Further improvements in local-regional control are not likely to impact survival until more effective systemic agents are developed to prevent and/or treat distant metastatic disease.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 1993

Combined radiotherapy and chemotherapy in the management of local-regionally advanced vulvar cancer

Wui Jin Koh; H.James Wallace; Benjamin E. Greer; Joanna M. Cain; Keith J. Stelzer; Kenneth J. Russell; Hisham K. Tamimi; David C. Figge; Anthony H. Russell; Thomas W. Griffin

PURPOSEnTo determine, in a retrospective single institutional study, the role of concurrent radiotherapy and chemotherapy in the treatment of local-regionally advanced vulvar cancer.nnnMETHODS AND MATERIALSnFrom 1984 to 1991, 20 patients with locally extensive primary or recurrent carcinoma of the vulva were treated with initial combined radiotherapy and chemotherapy. Seven patients had Federation Internationale de Gynecologie et dObstretrique Stage III disease, 10 had Stage IV disease, and three were treated for recurrent disease. None of these patients were considered candidates for primary radical vulvectomy and groin node dissection. Median radiation doses to regions of microscopic disease and gross tumor were 40 Gy (range 30-54 Gy) and 54 Gy (34-70.4 Gy), respectively. All patients received 2 or 3 cycles of 5-Fluorouracil concurrently with radiotherapy. In addition, five patients received Cis-platinum, and one Mitomycin-C. Median at-risk follow-up interval was 37 months.nnnRESULTSnTen patients had complete resolution of tumor to initial chemoradiotherapy, and eight of these have remained free of tumor relapse. Eight other patients had partial responses, with tumor bulk reduced by > 50%, while the remaining two patients had local-regionally progressive disease. Six of the patients with partial responses had residual tumor successfully resected, although four subsequently recurred. For the entire group of 20 patients, the actuarial 3- and 5-year local control rates were 48% each, and the corresponding disease-specific survival rates were 59% and 49%. There was a suggestion that better local control was obtained in patients who received gross tumor radiation doses > or = 50 Gy. Skin reaction was the major acute toxicity and responded well to conservative management. Long-term sequalae were limited to skin and subcutaneous atrophy.nnnCONCLUSIONnThese results indicate that initial combined radiotherapy and chemotherapy is effective in the management of advanced vulvar cancer.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 2001

The efficacy of radiotherapy as postoperative treatment for desmoid tumors

John A. Jelinek; Keith J. Stelzer; Ernest U. Conrad; James D. Bruckner; Michel Kliot; Wui Jin Koh; George E. Laramore

PURPOSEnThe purpose of this study was to determine if radiotherapy is a beneficial adjuvant treatment after desmoid tumor resection.nnnMETHODS AND MATERIALSnA retrospective analysis was performed on 54 patients who underwent surgery without prior radiation at our institution between 1982 and 1998 to remove a desmoid tumor. Thirty-five patients had adjuvant radiation therapy after surgery, and 19 patients had surgery alone without immediate postoperative radiation. Sixteen of the 35 patients who underwent immediate postoperative radiation treatment had at least one prior resection before reoperation at our institution. Recurrence was defined as radiographic increase in tumor size after treatment. Follow-up interval (mean 39 months) and duration of local control were measured from the date of surgery at our institution. Potential prognostic factors for time to tumor progression were analyzed.nnnRESULTSnAdjuvant treatment with radiation was the only significant prognostic factor for local control. The five-year actuarial local control rate was 81% for the 35 patients who underwent radiation in addition to surgery, compared to 53% for the 19 patients who underwent surgery alone (p = 0.018). For the patients who did not receive adjuvant radiation, only younger age at the time of surgery was associated with increased risk of failure (p = 0.035). Gross or microscopic margin status and number of prior operations were not detected as prognostic for local failure. For patients who did receive postoperative radiation, only abdominal location was associated with increased risk of failure (p = 0.0097).nnnCONCLUSIONnRadiation treatment as an adjuvant to surgery improved local control over surgery alone. Multiple operations before adjuvant radiation did not decrease the probability of subsequent tumor control. Radiation should be considered as adjuvant therapy to surgery if repeated surgery for a recurrent tumor would be complicated by a significant risk of morbidity.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 1995

Neutron radiotherapy for adenoid cystic carcinoma of minor salivary glands

James G. Douglas; George E. Laramore; Mary Austin-Seymour; Wui Jin Koh; K.L. Lindsley; Paul S. Cho; Thomas W. Griffin

PURPOSEnTo examine the efficacy of fast neutron radiotherapy for the treatment of patients with locally advanced, adenoid cystic carcinoma of minor salivary glands and to identify prognostic variables associated with local control, overall survival, and cause specific survival.nnnMETHODS AND MATERIALSnEighty-four patients having adenoid cystic carcinoma of minor salivary glands were treated with fast neutron radiotherapy during the years 1985-1994. All patients had either unresectable disease or gross disease remaining after attempted surgical extirpation. Seventeen patients had previously received conventional radiotherapy and their subsequent treatment fields and doses for neutron radiotherapy were modified for critical sites (brainstem, spinal cord, brain). Although the median doses (tumor maximum and tumor minimum) only varied by < or = 10%, treatment portals were substantially smaller in these patients because of normal tissue complication considerations. Twelve patients (13%) had distant metastases at the time of treatment and were only treated palliatively with smaller treatment portals and lower median tumor doses (< or = 80% of the doses delivered to curatively treated patients). Seventy-two patients were treated with curative intent, with nine of these having recurrent tumors after prior full-dose radiotherapy. The median duration of follow-up at the time of analysis was 31.5 months (range 3-115). Sites of disease and number of patients treated per disease site were as follows: paranasal sinus-31; oral cavity-20; oropharynx-12; nasopharynx-11; trachea-6; and other sites in the head and neck-4.nnnRESULTSnThe 5-year actuarial local-regional tumor control rate for all patients treated with curative intent was 47%. Patients without involvement of the cavernous sinus, base of skull, or nasopharynx (51 patients) had a 5-year actuarial local-regional control rate of 59%, whereas local-regional control was significantly lower (15%) for patients with tumors involving these sites (p < 0.005). In the latter cases, normal tissue injury considerations precluded delivery of the full dose to the entire tumor. Patients with no history of prior radiotherapy (63 patients) had an actuarial local control rate of 57% at 5 years compared to 18% for those (9 patients) who had been previously irradiated with conventional photons (p = 0.018). Eliminating the dose-limiting factors of prior radiation therapy and/or high risk sites of involvement, the 5-year actuarial local-regional control rate for these 46 patients was 63%, with an actuarial cause specific survival rate of 79%. Lymph node status was a predictor of distant metastasis: 57% of node positive patients developed distant metastases by 5 years compared to 15% of patients with negative nodes (p < 0.0005), and patients who had nodal involvement developed distant metastases sooner than node negative patients (p < 0.0001). The 5-year actuarial overall survival and cause specific survival for the 72 patients treated with curative intent were 59% and 64%, respectively.nnnCONCLUSIONSnFast neutron radiotherapy offers high local-regional control and survival rates for patients with locally advanced, unresectable adenoid cystic carcinomas of minor salivary glands. It should be considered as initial primary treatment for these patients, as well as for other patients in whom surgical extirpation would cause considerable morbidity.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 1993

Femoral vessel depth and the implications for groin node radiation.

Wui Jin Koh; Mary Chiu; Keith J. Stelzer; Benjamin E. Greer; Dean Mastras; Nathan Comsia; Kenneth J. Russell; Thomas W. Griffin

PURPOSEnTo quantify, based on pretreatment computer tomographic measurements, potential groin node depths, which will aid in optimal treatment planning for patients requiring groin node radiation.nnnMETHODS AND MATERIALSnThe pretreatment computer tomographic scans of 50 gynecologic cancer patients were reviewed to determine the distance of each femoral vessel beneath the overlying skin surface, as an indicator of potential groin node depth. Correlative data regarding height and weight were obtained from patient medical records, and were used to calculate the Quetelet index, defined as (weight in kg)/(height in m)2. Treatment parameters of 5 patients who failed prophylactic groin radiation in a recently published study were assessed to determine if underdosage represented a possible cause of failure.nnnRESULTSnIndividual femoral vessel depths ranged from 2.0 to 18.5 cm. When the depths of all four femoral vessels were averaged in each patient, the mean 4-vessel average depth for this patient population was 6.1 cm. The median Quetelet index for the group was 25.6, and there was a strong correlation between femoral vessel depth and patient Quetelet index. Recalculation of doses provided to the 5 patients failing prophylactic groin radiation in the Gynecologic Oncology Group study showed that all had received potential tumor doses < 4700 cGy, with 3 patients being underdosed by > 30%.nnnCONCLUSIONnWhile surgery is often indicated in the management of patients with potential groin node metastases, the role of prophylactic groin radiation should not be rejected. Data from this study may aid in the optimal design and implementation of groin node radiotherapy.


Cancer | 1993

Radiation recall skin toxicity with bleomycin in a patient with kaposi sarcoma related to acquired immune deficiency syndrome

Keith J. Stelzer; Thomas W. Griffin; Wui Jin Koh

Background. Radiation recall is a recurrence of acute toxicity within a previously quiescent radiation field that occurs with subsequent administration of chemotherapy.


Gynecologic Oncology | 1990

Gynecologic radiotherapy fields defined by intraoperative measurements

Benjamin E. Greer; Wui Jin Koh; David C. Figge; Anthony H. Russell; Joanna M. Cain; Hisham K. Tamimi

Whole-pelvis radiation therapy has been traditionally delivered through fields, the dimensions of which have been determined by convention and based largely on textbook anatomic landmarks. Since July 1986, 100 patients have had intraoperative retroperitoneal measurements carried out at the time of radical surgery in an effort to examine this anatomic basis for field dimensions. Structural measurements of the pelvic and paraaortic arterial branches were made in reference to the lumbosacral prominence to correlate with lymphatic pathways. The mean level of the aortic bifurcation was found to be 6.7 cm above the lumbosacral prominence. The mean level of the bifurcation of the common iliac artery was 1.7 cm above this reference point on the right and 1.4 cm above on the left. Both common iliac bifurcations were cephalad to the level of the lumbosacral prominence in 87% of patients. In only three patients were both bifurcations located below this level. Transverse pelvic dimension measurements demonstrated a width of 12.3 cm at the level of the obturator fossa and of 13.0 cm at the most inferior outside width of the external iliac arteries. To establish a simple external reference which could assist in defining radiotherapy field widths, the maximal separation of the femoral arteries at the level of inguinal ligaments was measured and averaged 14.6 cm. These data suggest that conventional fields frequently fail to correspond to true anatomic landmarks and that to optimally cover the lymphatics in radiotherapy, fields should, ideally, be based on intraoperative measurements. If such surgical guides are not available, we would suggest that standard whole-pelvis radiotherapy for cervical cancers should employ anterior and posterior fields with widths of at least 16 cm which will fully include the bifemoral separation. A superior border at the L4-L5 interspace is required to cover lymphatic pathways to the mid-common iliac nodal level. It may also be convincingly pointed out that the attachments of the uterosacral and cardinal ligaments are clearly posterior to the rectosigmoid, mandating lateral fields that should encompass the entire anterior sacral silhouette.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 1990

Combined 5-fluorouracil and irradiation for transitional cell carcinoma of the urinary bladder

Kenneth J. Russell; M. Boileau; C. Higano; C. Collins; Anthony H. Russell; Wui Jin Koh; S.B. Cole; W. Chapman; Thomas W. Griffin

Thirty-four patients have completed treatment on a bladder-preservation protocol using primary irradiation combined with infusion 5-fluorouracil (5-FU). 4,000 cGy pelvic irradiation was delivered in 5 weeks, with 1,000 mg/m2/day of 5-FU administered as a 96 hr infusion on days 1-4 of week 1 and 4. After a 3-week rest period, patients eligible for cystectomy underwent cystoscopy and biopsy. Those with residual tumor underwent cystectomy, and those without tumor received an additional cycle of chemotherapy and irradiation. Patients ineligible for cystectomy for reasons medical, surgical, or refusal received a third cycle without the 4-week delay or re-evaluation. With a median follow-up of 18 months (range 2-45 months), and with 25/34 patients having T3 (16) or T4 (9) tumors, 17 patients are NED, 4 have died of intercurrent deaths, 7 have died with bladder cancer, and 6 are alive with tumor (2 confined to the bladder). The actuarial cancer-specific survival for the entire group of patients is 64% (+/- 12%) at 45 months, with a freedom from relapse of invasive cancer of 54% (+/- 10%). Twenty-four of the 34 patients retained intact bladders, with 20/24 reporting entirely normal voiding. Of 18 potential surgical candidates, 13/16 (81%) who underwent pathologic re-staging after 2 cycles of chemoradiotherapy had no histologic evidence of residual cancer. Of these 13 patients, 8 remain NED and 2/13 have locally recurrent non-invasive tumors only. Treatment was well-tolerated, with 28/34 patients having received 100% of the planned 5-FU and 34/34 having received greater than 80%. This regimen appears more successful than radiotherapy alone in achieving complete tumor responses, and is an attractive alternative for patients who are unable to receive more aggressive chemotherapy/radiation combinations.


Head and Neck-journal for The Sciences and Specialties of The Head and Neck | 2000

Metastasis to a percutaneous gastrostomy site from head and neck cancer: Radiobiologic considerations

James G. Douglas; Wui Jin Koh; George E. Laramore

The use of percutaneously placed feeding tubes has increased in recent years in an effort to maintain adequate caloric balance in patients receiving combined therapy for head and neck cancers, particularly concurrent radiotherapy and chemotherapy.


Head and Neck-journal for The Sciences and Specialties of The Head and Neck | 1999

Neutron radiotherapy for the treatment of locally advanced major salivary gland tumors

James G. Douglas; Shawn Lee; George E. Laramore; Mary Austin-Seymour; Wui Jin Koh; Thomas W. Griffin

Malignant salivary gland tumors are rare tumors of the head and neck region. The treatment of these tumors has generally consisted of surgical extirpation, with postoperative radiotherapy improving locoregional control and survival in patients with high risk tumors. Neutron radiotherapy has been found to be more efficacious than conventional radiotherapy in the setting of inoperable or subtotally resected salivary gland tumors.

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Keith J. Stelzer

University of Washington Medical Center

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Kenneth J. Russell

University of Washington Medical Center

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Joanna M. Cain

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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