Abstract 455P
Background
Conventional whole-brain radiation therapy (WBRT) exhibits poor local tumor control and decreased neurocognitive function (NCF). Herein, we investigated the safety and efficacy of a novel approach–hippocampus-avoidance whole-brain radiation therapy with simultaneous integrated boost (HA-WBRT+SIB)– in patients of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) with multiple brain metastases.
Methods
We conducted a prospective, single-arm phase II trial administering HA-WBRT (30 Gy in 12 fractions, Dmax of the hippocampal volume ≤ 17 Gy, Dmean of the hippocampal volume ≤12 Gy) +SIB (48 Gy in 12 fractions) for multiple brain metastases (≥4) of NSCLC. Survival and intracranial tumor control were compared with patients who underwent conventional WBRT (a retrospective cohort) by propensity score matching analysis (PSM). Cognitive performance in the HA-WBRT+SIB cohort was assessed by the Hopkins Verbal LearningTest–Revised delayed Recall (HVLT-R DR).
Results
Between January 2021 and July 2023, 23 patients were enrolled in the HA-WBRT+SIB cohort. After 1:2 PSM (HA-WBRT+SIB versus WBRT= 23:46), intracranial local progression-free survival (iLPFS) (16.43 versus 5.9 months; P = 0.004) and intracranial progression-free survival (iPFS) (11.1 versus 5.7 months; P = 0.014) were significantly improved following HA-WBRT+SIB. The cumulative incidence of intracranial local failure (9.6% versus 34.2% at 1 year; P= 0.027) was improved in the HA-WBRT+SIB cohort. One patients (4.3%) developed hippocampal metastases after hippocampus avoidance. There was an average decline of 7.08% ± 5.23% in the HVLT-R DR at 4 months post-HA-WBRT+SIB (95%CI: 10.0% to 6.5%).
Conclusions
For patients with multiple brain metastases of NSCLC, HA-WBRT+SIB emerges as a promising and safe therapeutic alternative, demonstrating improved intracranial tumor control and protecting cognitive function.
Clinical trial identification
Editorial acknowledgement
Legal entity responsible for the study
Yatian Liu.
Funding
This study was supported by the Nanjing Medical University of Collaborative Innovation Center for Cancer Personalized Medicine (JZ23349020200108) and Jiangsu Cancer Hospital level projects (ZM202021).
Disclosure
All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
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