Title: Pelvic Breakout Group
1Pelvic Breakout Group
2Purpose of meeting
- What is current status of radiation oncology
technologies today. - Where should we invest research resources to best
understand value of technology - Biology questions can be addressed parallel to
technology usage - Preop rectumexamine tissue effects
- IMRT low doses
- QA, training, educationis required to optimally
implement new technology - Clinical trials are necessary to evaluate
technology
3KEY QUESTION 1
- The raison detre for the advanced technologies
is to increase the dose to the cancer without
increasing toxicity, or deliver the same dose as
conventional technology but with less toxicity. - QUESTION In which cancers is there the most
pressing need for new technology for increasing
the dose or decreasing the toxicity?
4KEY QUESTION 1
- The raison detre for the advanced technologies
is to accurately target and improve our
understanding when we increase the dose to the
cancer without increasing toxicity, or deliver
the same dose as conventional technology but with
less toxicity. - QUESTION In which cancers is there the most
pressing need for new technology for increasing
the dose or decreasing the toxicity?
Targeting is just as important as dose. If you
give high doses but miss, you have failed
5In which cancers is there the most pressing need
for new technology for increasing the dose or
decreasing the toxicity?
- Prostateremains an important public health
problem. Dose matters but is gt80Gy necessary? - Postop prostatewhat is the CTV?
- Nodal target volumes are important in all pelvic
malignancies. What is best way to define (PET,
MR-LG, RaAb) - Cervixwhat is the CTV?
- MR guided brachytherapy
- Rectal CancerIMRT for short course RT 5x5Gy
6In which cancers is there the most pressing need
for new technology for increasing the dose or
decreasing the toxicity?
- Prostate
- Important public health problem
- Local control remains problematic
- Dose escalation to Subclinical disease
- Rectum
- Dose to small bowel
- Interactions of systemic therapy and XRT
- Biomarkers and interaction with XRT
- Cervix
- Opportunity for adaptive (change plan) RT
- Interactions of systemic therapy and XRT
- Dose to small bowel
- What is the CTV for primary and nodal drainage
- PET, MR-LG, Labeled antibodies, etc
7In which cancers is there the most pressing need
for new technology for increasing the dose or
decreasing the toxicity?
- Should we dose escalate subclinical disease?
e.g. 75Gy to the PAN - What about the role of systemic therapy when we
intensify local therapy? - Biomarkers and their interactions with radiation
therapytailored dose escalation - Cervix, rectum, prostate
- Cervix an opportunity for adaptive radiation
therapy trial (image guidance) - Change plan to eliminate brachytherapy (response
based)?
8KEY QUESTION 2
- Demonstrating improved ANTICIPATED dose
distributions (in-silico or in phantoms) only
generates the hypothesis that a new technology
may be superior. To prove that hypothesis, we
must demonstrate - by controlled clinical trials
- a clinically meaningful increase in survival
and/or decrease in toxicity. - QUESTION What clinical trials are the most
important for demonstrating a meaningful benefit
to patients?
9What clinical trials are the most important for
demonstrating a meaningful benefit to patients?
- Prostatephase III trial with QOL endpoints
- Might be too soon to study, once organ motion and
delivery uncertainties are resolvedif RadOnc
community demands it. - Prostate High riskphase II trial
- Nodal RT (IMRT) and further dose escalation HT
- Rectumphase II trials
- Biological endpoints
- QOL
- CervixPhase I/II trials
- Biological correlates
- QOL
10What clinical trials are the most important for
demonstrating a meaningful benefit to patients?
- Fractionation opportunities in all sites
- QOL should be allowed as a primary endpoint in
phase III trials
11KEY QUESTION 3
- Demonstrating improved ACTUAL dose distribution
in the patient could be useful in phase I/II
trials. - QUESTION What technological developments are
required for demonstrating ACTUAL dose
distribution in-vivo?
12What technological developments are required for
demonstrating ACTUAL dose distribution in-vivo?
- Dose modeling (with validated calculation
methods) - Exit fluence
- Deformation
- Tracking of accumulated dose
- Activated PET measures
- Implanted dosimeters
- Elimination of systematic errorcan this be
studied in a clinical trial
Cannot underestimate need to verify dose
delivery20 rule!
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14KEY QUESTION 4
- Other clinical or biological intermediate
end-points may be useful in clinical trials. - QUESTION What might those intermediate
end-points be (and what lessons have we learned
regarding their pitfalls from PSA, etc?)
15What might those intermediate end-points be (and
what lessons have we learned regarding their
pitfalls from PSA, etc?)
- PSA Phoenix/ASTRO definition
- Pathologic CR in rectal cancer
- PET imaging for rectum, cervix
- FLT, F-Miso during XRT
- FDG pre and post XRT
- MRS for cervix
- MRI/MRS post RT for Prostate
- Serum and fresh tissue banking
- Genomics, Proteomics