Purpose:
To report a case series of 3 pediatric patients treated with Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy (SBRT) for lung metastases.
Patients and methods:
Three patients (ages 9, 11, and 21) received SBRT for rhabdoid tumor, Ewing sarcoma, and Wilms tumor histologies, respectively. SBRT doses were 37.5–50 Gy in 3–5 fractions treating twelve lesions.
Results:
Three patients (ages 9, 11, and 21) received photon SBRT for pulmonary metastases. The patients were as follows: 1) 21-year-old male with favorable histology Wilms tumor and 1 lesion treated, 2) 11-year-old female with Ewing sarcoma and 1 lesion treated for relapse after previous whole lung radiation (15 Gy), and 3) 9-year-old female with rhabdoid tumor of the left thigh with 10 lesions treated over a two-year period. Median dose delivered was 40 Gy (range, 37.5–50 Gy), delivered in a median of 4 fractions (range, 4–5) of a median of 10 Gy per fraction (range, 9.4–10 Gy). Within a minimum follow-up of 1.9 years (range 1.9–4 years), local control for all 13 treated metastases is 100% without any observed acute toxicities. One possible late toxicity (grade 2 rib fracture) developed 1.3 years following SBRT for treatment of a peripheral lesion (rhabdoid tumor) in an area of disease progression and was managed conservatively. Two patients are surviving 2.9 years (Wilms tumor) and 1.9 years (Ewing sarcoma) after SBRT, and one (rhabdoid tumor) expired 2 years after her final course (4 years after initial SBRT). Two patients (rhabdoid tumor and Ewing sarcoma) suffered disease progression outside of the treated lesions and one patient (Wilms tumor) is without evidence of disease and has not required whole lung irradiation or further systemic therapy.
Conclusion:
SBRT appears effective and well tolerated for pediatric lung metastases, however further studies are warranted.
ABSTRACT:The course of a patient with an olfactory neuroblastoma treated with conventional doses of chemotherapeutic agents and radiotherapy is presented. The patient survived 34 months after tumour necrosis with resultant pneumocephalus requiring surgical intervention.
Radiation recall dermatitis is an inflammatory reaction of the skin that may infrequently occur in areas of the skin that have been previously treated with radiation therapy. This is thought to be due to a triggering agent administered after radiation therapy which leads to an acute inflammatory reaction, manifesting as a skin rash. We present the case of a 58-year-old male with recurrent invasive squamous cell carcinoma of the tongue, previously treated with chemotherapy and radiation therapy, who presented with progression of his disease. He was treated with pembrolizumab and subsequently developed a new-onset facial rash over the previously treated radiation field. The distribution of the rash was suggestive of radiation recall dermatitis. A biopsy showed dermal necrosis without evidence of dermatitis, vasculitis, or infectious process. This case highlights the incidence of a rare complication of immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy and emphasizes the need for careful monitoring for radiation recall dermatitis.
Purpose
Radiotherapy (RT) is associated with improved survival in atypical teratoid/rhabdoid tumor (ATRT); however, optimal RT delivery is unknown. A meta‐analysis was conducted for disseminated (M+) ATRT receiving focal or craniospinal radiation (CSI).
Methods
After abstract screening, 25 studies (1995–2020) contained necessary patient, disease, and radiation treatment information (N = 96). All abstract, full text, and data capture were independently double‐reviewed. The corresponding author was contacted for cases of insufficient information. Response to pre‐radiation chemotherapy (N = 57) was categorized as complete response (CR), partial response (PR), stable disease (SD), and progressive disease (PD). Univariate and multivariate statistics were performed to investigate survival correlation. Patients with M4 disease were excluded.
Results
The 2‐ and 4‐year overall survival (OS) was 63.8% and 45.7%, respectively, with a median follow‐up of 2 years (range 0.3–13.5). The median age was 2 years (range 0.2–19.5), and 96% received chemotherapy. On univariate analysis, gross total resection (GTR, p = .0007), pre‐radiation chemotherapy response (p < .001), and high‐dose chemotherapy with stem cell recuse (HDSCT, p = .002) correlated with survival. On multivariate analysis, pre‐radiation chemotherapy response (p = .02) and GTR (p = .012) retained survival significance as compared to a trend for HDSCT (p = .072). Comparisons of focal RT (vs. CSI) and greater than or equal to 5400 cGy primary dose were nonsignificant. Following CR or PR, a statistical trend favored focal radiation (p = .089) over CSI.
Conclusion
Chemotherapy response prior to RT and GTR correlated with improved survival on multivariate analysis for ATRT M+ receiving RT. No benefit was observed for CSI compared to focal RT among all patients and following favorable chemotherapy response, inviting further study of focal RT for ATRT M+.
Purpose/Objective(s): Cardiovascular toxicities have been implicated in several anti-neoplastic strategies. Certain chemotherapeutics, biologic agents and fractionated radiation have been attributed to cardiac complications. This is despite cancer-specific death being a significant competing risk in thoracic tumors. A prior analysis of stereotactic ablative radiation
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