Abstract

Some patients are ineligible for intracavitary brachytherapy (ICBT) for locally advanced cervical cancer. Stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) could be a good treatment option for such patients. This phase I clinical trial aimed to determine the recommended SBRT boost dose for ICBT-ineligible cervical cancer patients. Patients with untreated uterine cervical cancer (clinical stages IB1-IIIB) who were ineligible for ICBT were enrolled. Radiotherapy consisted of whole-pelvis radiotherapy (45 Gy in 25 fractions) followed by SBRT. Three dose levels of SBRT (19.5/21/22.5 Gy in three fractions) were set; the treatment protocol began at 21 Gy (level 2). The 'rolling-six' design study was used to establish the recommended dose of SBRT. Each dose level covered three or six patients. The primary endpoint included dose-limiting toxicity (DLT), defined as the occurrence of grade 3 (or worse) non-hematologic adverse effects within 6 months after SBRT. The median follow-up after registration was 17 (range, 8-32) months. Three patients were enrolled in study level 2 (SBRT of 21 Gy); none of the patients exhibited DLT within 6 months after treatment completion. In study level 3 (SBRT of 22.5 Gy), three patients did not exhibit DLT. Although all six patients achieved locoregional control during follow-up, one patient treated with level 2 SBRT experienced distant metastases 14 months after registration. The recommended dose of SBRT boost was 22.5 Gy in three fractions. We plan to conduct a phase II multi-center clinical trial using the methodology obtained from the current study.

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