Abstract

BackgroundVirally mediated head and neck cancers (VMHNC) often present with nodal involvement and are highly radio responsive, meaning that treatment plan adaptation during radiotherapy (RT) in a subset of patients is required. This study sought to determine potential risk profiles and a corresponding adaptive treatment strategy for these patients. MethodologyOne hundred twenty-one patients with virally mediated, node positive nasopharyngeal (Epstein-Barr virus positive) or oropharyngeal (human papillomavirus positive) cancers who were receiving curative intent RT were reviewed. The type, frequency, and timing of adaptive interventions, including source-to-skin distance (SSD) corrections, rescanning, and replanning, were evaluated. Patients were reviewed based on the maximum size of the dominant node to assess the need for plan adaptation. ResultsForty-six patients (38%) required plan adaptation during treatment. The median fraction at which the adaptive intervention occurred was 26 for SSD corrections and 22 for replanning CTs. A trend toward three risk profile groupings was discovered: (1) low risk with minimal need (<10%) for adaptive intervention (dominant pretreatment nodal size of ≤35 mm), (2) intermediate risk with possible need (<20%) for adaptive intervention (dominant pretreatment nodal size of 36–45 mm), and (3) high risk with increased likelihood (>50%) for adaptive intervention (dominant pretreatment nodal size of ≥46 mm). ConclusionsIn this study, patients with VMHNC and a maximum dominant nodal size of >46 mm were identified at a higher risk of requiring replanning during a course of definitive RT. Findings will be tested in a future prospective adaptive RT study.

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