Abstract

ObjectiveIn light of the dogma that brachytherapy is irreplaceable for the successful treatment of cervical cancer, and the limited availability of brachytherapy facilities in developing countries, we sought to evaluate the toxicity and efficacy of taxol- and platinum-based doublet chemotherapy delivered concurrently with external beam radiotherapy (EBRT) in locally advanced cervical cancer as an alternative to brachytherapy, which is mandated as the standard of care according to current guidelines.MethodsThe records from our institution were reviewed to identify patients who underwent chemoradiation with two doses of tri-weekly docetaxel (80mg/m2) and carboplatin (AUC 5) concurrent with EBRT between January 2017 and 2019 for locally advanced cervical carcinoma. Here, 48 cases were analysed, with a median follow-up period of two years.ResultsThe two groups were homogenously matched, and the patients who received EBRT boost and brachytherapy boost achieved complete pathological response rates of 68% and 83%, respectively (p=0.243). The odds ratio was 0.45 (95% confidence interval, 0.09-2.08), indicative of non-significance and non-inferiority based on the analysis using the chi-squared test (with Pearson’s correlation) and Student's t-test. The disease-free survival durations calculated using Kaplan-Meier estimates were 22 and 24 months, two-year disease-free survival rates were 83% and 91.3%, and two-year overall survival (OS) were 85.6% and 94% for the EBRT boost and brachytherapy boost groups, respectively (p=0.657).ConclusionIn this retrospective analysis, we concluded that EBRT boost was non-inferior to brachytherapy boost and could be considered as a reasonable alternative in locally advanced cervical cancer when used concurrently with more dose-intense chemotherapy.

Highlights

  • Cervical cancer is the third commonest cause of cancer-related mortality among Indian women

  • Surgery is the preferred modality for stages IA-IIA1 of cervical cancer, while locally advanced cases are treated with concurrent chemoradiation, which usually includes external beam radiation with concurrent chemotherapy followed by intracavitary brachytherapy

  • We propose the use of dose-intense chemotherapy with external beam radiotherapy (EBRT) as a clinically effective alternative to brachytherapy

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Summary

Introduction

Cervical cancer is the third commonest cause of cancer-related mortality among Indian women. India accounts for approximately 25% of the global burden of cervical cancer, and 17% of cervical cancer-related deaths occur among women aged 30-69 years [1]. Statistical data suggest that approximately 527,624 new cervical cancer cases are included in the Globocan database annually worldwide. India alone contributes approximately 122,844 cervical cancer cases annually [2]. Surgery is the preferred modality for stages IA-IIA1 of cervical cancer, while locally advanced cases (stages IIA2-IIIC) are treated with concurrent chemoradiation, which usually includes external beam radiation with concurrent chemotherapy followed by intracavitary brachytherapy. Concurrent platinum-based chemotherapy has been combined with radiotherapy based on the evidence from two meta-analyses that confirmed the survival benefits of concomitant administration of platinum-based chemotherapy and radiation [3,4]

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