[Dose-escalated radiotherapy in esophageal cancer: A review of the literature].

Fiche publication


Date publication

octobre 2022

Journal

Cancer radiotherapie : journal de la Societe francaise de radiotherapie oncologique

Auteurs

Membres identifiés du Cancéropôle Est :
Dr BOUSTANI Jihane


Tous les auteurs :
Boustani J, Créhange G

Résumé

For non-operable, localized esophageal cancer, definitive concurrent chemoradiotherapy is the standard treatment. Currently, the radiation dose recommended is 50 to 50,4Gy. However, the optimal radiation dose remains controversial. Many studies have demonstrated that locoregional failure remains a common failure pattern, most likely to occur within the original gross tumor volume. Several retrospective studies have indicated that higher radiation dose may improve local control and survival while others failed to demonstrate improved oucomes. In three randomized trials (INT0123, ARTDECO, and CONCORDE), dose escalation did not improve locoregional control nor survival, establishing 50Gy as the standard chemoradiation dose for patients who will not undergo surgery. Here, we reviewed the results of dose escalation in the literature in the neoadjuvant and definitive settings.

Mots clés

Cancer de l’œsophage, Chemoradiation, Chimioradiothérapie, Contrôle locorégional, Dose-escalation, Escalade de dose, Esophageal cancer, Locoregional control

Référence

Cancer Radiother. 2022 10;26(6-7):884-889