Abstract

Palliative thoracic radiotherapy (RT) can alleviate local symptoms associated with advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), but esophagitis is a common treatment-related adverse event. Whether esophageal-sparing intensity-modulated RT (ES-IMRT) achieves a clinically relevant reduction in esophageal symptoms remains unclear. To examine whether ES-IMRT achieves a clinically relevant reduction in esophageal symptoms compared with standard RT. Palliative Radiation for Advanced Central Lung Tumors With Intentional Avoidance of the Esophagus (PROACTIVE) is a multicenter phase 3 randomized clinical trial that enrolled patients between June 24, 2016, and March 6, 2019. Data analysis was conducted from January 23, 2020, to October 22, 2021. Patients had up to 1 year of follow-up. Ninety patients at 6 tertiary academic cancer centers who had stage III/IV NSCLC and were eligible for palliative thoracic RT (20 Gy in 5 fractions or 30 Gy in 10 fractions) were included. Patients were randomized (1:1) to standard RT (control arm) or ES-IMRT. Target coverage was compromised to ensure the maximum esophagus dose was no more than 80% of the RT prescription dose. The primary outcome was esophageal quality of life (QOL) 2 weeks post-RT, measured by the esophageal cancer subscale (ECS) of the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy: Esophagus questionnaire. Higher esophageal cancer subscale scores correspond with improved QOL, with a 2- to 3-point change considered clinically meaningful. Secondary outcomes included overall survival, toxic events, and other QOL metrics. Intention-to-treat analysis was used. Between June 24, 2016, and March 6, 2019, 90 patients were randomized to standard RT or ES-IMRT (median age at randomization, 72.0 years [IQR, 65.6-80.3]; 50 [56%] were female). Thirty-six patients (40%) received 20 Gy and 54 (60%) received 30 Gy. For the primary end point, the mean (SD) 2-week ECS score was 50.5 (10.2) in the control arm (95% CI, 47.2-53.8) and 54.3 (7.6) in the ES-IMRT arm (95% CI, 51.9-56.7) (P = .06). Symptomatic RT-associated esophagitis occurred in 24% (n = 11) of patients in the control arm vs 2% (n = 1) in the ES-IMRT arm (P = .002). In a post hoc subgroup analysis based on the stratification factor, reduction in esophagitis was most evident in patients receiving 30 Gy (30% [n = 8] vs 0%; P = .004). Overall survival was similar with standard RT (median, 8.6; 95% CI, 5.7-15.6 months) and ES-IMRT (median, 8.7; 95% CI, 5.1-10.2 months) (P = .62). In this phase 3 randomized clinical trial, ES-IMRT did not significantly improve esophageal QOL but significantly reduced the incidence of symptomatic esophagitis. Because post hoc analysis found that reduced esophagitis was most evident in patients receiving 30 Gy of RT, these findings suggest that ES-IMRT may be most beneficial when the prescription dose is higher (30 Gy). ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02752126.

Highlights

  • MethodsStudy Design The Palliative Radiation for Advanced Central Lung Tumors With Intentional Avoidance of the Esophagus (PROACTIVE) study was an investigator-initiated, multi-institutional, openlabel, parallel-group, phase 3 randomized clinical trial conducted by the Canadian Pulmonary Radiotherapy Investigators group at 6 Canadian academic centers

  • Survival was similar between arms, with a median overall survival (OS) of 8.6 months in the control arm vs 8.7 months in the esophageal-sparing intensity-modulated radiotherapy (ES-Intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT)) arm. In this phase 3 randomized clinical trial, ES-IMRT for advanced non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) did not meet the primary end point of a 2-week improvement -E esophageal quality of life (QOL) compared with standard palliative RT, but showed nonsignificant improvement in the primary end point and achieved a substantial improvement in symptomatic esophagitis rates

  • Our findings represent the first randomized evidence addressing whether ES-IMRT may hold value in reducing esophageal adverse effects and build on the growing literature indicating that advanced radiation techniques can reduce esophagitis in this population

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Summary

Methods

Study Design The Palliative Radiation for Advanced Central Lung Tumors With Intentional Avoidance of the Esophagus (PROACTIVE) study was an investigator-initiated, multi-institutional, openlabel, parallel-group, phase 3 randomized clinical trial conducted by the Canadian Pulmonary Radiotherapy Investigators group at 6 Canadian academic centers. Patients with biopsy-proven stage III/IV NSCLC who were being considered for palliative RT were stratified by intended-dose prescription (20 Gy in 5 fractions vs 30 Gy in 10 fractions), with the selection of RT dose at the discretion of the treating radiation oncologist. Patients were randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio to receive either standard palliative thoracic RT (control arm; RT delivered using conventional radiation without esophageal sparing, with a POP technique preferred) or ES-IMRT.

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