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Helical tomotherapy with concurrent capecitabine for the treatment of inoperable pancreatic cancer

  • Jeong Seon Ji
  • , Chi Wha Han
  • , Jeong Won Jang
  • , Bo In Lee
  • , Byung Wook Kim
  • , Hwang Choi
  • , Ji Yoon Kim
  • , Young Nam Kang
  • , Chul Seung Kay
  • , Ihl Bohng Choi
  • The Catholic University of Korea Incheon St. Mary's Hospital
  • Catholic Univ. of Korea Coll. Med.
  • Chungdam Wooridul Spine Hospital

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: Helical tomotherapy, an advanced intensity-modulated radiation therapy with integrated CT imaging, permits highly conformal irradiation with sparing of normal tissue. Capecitabine, a pro-drug of 5-FU that induces thymidine phosphorylase can achieve higher levels of intracellular 5-FU when administered concurrently with radiation. We evaluated the feasibility as well as the clinical outcome of concurrent administration of capecitabine with tomotherapy in patients with advanced pancreatic cancer.Methods: Nineteen patients with advanced pancreatic cancer including primarily unresectable disease and recurrence after curative surgery were included in the study. Two planning target volumes (PTV) were entered: PTV1 is gross tumor volume; and PTV2, the volume of the draining lymph nodes. The total doses to target 1 and target 2 were 55 and 50 Gy, respectively. Capecitabine at 1600 mg/m2/day was administered on each day of irradiation.Results: Twenty six measurable lesions were evaluated. Overall in-field response rate was 42.3%; partial responses were achieved in 53.3% of the pancreatic masses, 28.6% of distant metastatic lesions and 25.0% of regional lymph nodes. The median duration of follow-up after tomotherapy was 6.5 months. None of the lesions showed in-field progression. Treatment was well tolerated with only minor toxicities such as grade 1 nausea (one patient), grade 1 hand-foot syndrome (one patient) and grade 1/2 fatigue (three patients).Conclusions: Helical tomotherapy with concurrent capecitabine is a feasible option without significant toxicities in patients with advanced pancreatic cancer. We achieved excellent conformal distribution of radiation doses and minimal treatment-related toxicities with promising target volume responses.

Original languageEnglish
Article number60
JournalRadiation Oncology
Volume5
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 28 Jun 2010

UN SDGs

This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  1. SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
    SDG 3 Good Health and Well-being

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