ESTRO 2022 - Abstract Book

S140

Abstract book

ESTRO 2022

Conclusion IBDM is feasible in breast radiotherapy and the accuracy of DIR was found acceptable. Nevertheless, larger cohorts of patients are needed to clarify the existence of a sensitive sub-region related to breast pain and/or other side effects. Further work will investigate increasing the power of the analysis by mirroring the patients’ anatomy to overlay left/right- sided dose distribution, and including patients treated in the prone position.

PD-0164 Proton therapy reduces the incidence of severe lymphopenia compared with photon

A. Abravan 1 , P. Sitch 2 , M. van Herk 1 , S. Gaito 2 , A. McPartlin 2 , S. Sashidaran 3 , E. Smith 2 , G. Whitfield 1 , S. Pan 2

1 The University of Manchester, Division of cancer sciences, MANCHESTER, United Kingdom; 2 The Christie NHS Foundation Trust, Proton beam therapy, MANCHESTER, United Kingdom; 3 Velindre University NHS Trust, Clinical oncology, Cardiff, United Kingdom Purpose or Objective Radiotherapy-induced lymphopenia may be associated with adverse outcome and reduced survival in various cancer types. Due to unique dosimetric characteristics, proton therapy can reduce the volumes of healthy tissue irradiated, potentially sparing lymphocytes. We investigated the incidence of severe lymphopenia in patients treated with either photons or protons, whose radiation treatment site included head and neck (H&N) and central nervous system (CNS). Materials and Methods Data from 44 patients treated with proton therapy and 44 with photon therapy at a single institute for H&N (n=52) or CNS (n=36) were included. Base of skull treatment were included in the H&N category. All patients had lymphocyte counts at baseline (< 90 days prior to radiotherapy) and during radiotherapy. Severe lymphopenia grade 3 or higher was based on lymphocytes at nadir during RT < 0.5x10 9 /L (CTCAE v5.0). If case of multiple clinical target volumes (CTVs), the largest CTV was used in the analysis. Vx was calculated from RT images and is a volume receiving x Gy or higher in the body normalized to body weight to account for patients’ size. For patients without weight data, it is imputed using a 3rd power fit of weight vs age from the available data. Multivariable logistic analysis was conducted to investigate the association between the incidence of severe lymphopenia and patients’ clinical, demographics, and dosimetric factors. To avoid multi-collinearity, dosimetric parameters were included in the multivariable regression one at a time together with other factors known to affect lymphocytes. Results Four (9%) and 17 (39%) of the patients developed grade 3 lymphopenia in the proton and photon treatment arm, respectively. There was a good match of baseline lymphocytes and CTV between proton and photon arms for each disease site (Table 1). However, lymphocyte counts during radiotherapy and the incidence of grade 2 and grade 3 lymphopenia was significantly lower in the proton arm. As seen in Table 2, in the univariable model, proton therapy was associated with the reduced risk of lymphopenia, however, it became insignificant when including dosimetric parameters in the multivariable model. Multivariable logistic regression adjusted for age, gender, treatment arm, and disease site suggested that lower baseline lymphocytes and larger volumes receiving 2 ‒ 30 Gy (V2, V5, V10, V20, V30) are associated with higher risk of developing grade 3 or higher lymphopenia during radiotherapy.

Made with FlippingBook Digital Publishing Software