Abstract

BackgroundPneumonitis is a possible side effect of radiotherapy for lung cancer. Since it can occur up to several months following treatment, symptoms may not be associated with previous radiotherapy, and pneumonitis can become severe before diagnosed. This study aimed to develop a symptom-based scoring system to contribute to earlier detection of radiation pneumonitis requiring medical intervention (grade ≥ 2).MethodsPatients irradiated for lung cancer complete a paper-based questionnaire (symptom-based score) during and up to 24 weeks following radiotherapy. Patients rate symptoms potentially associated with pneumonitis, and scoring points are assigned to severity of these symptoms. Sum scores are used to identify radiation pneumonitis. If radiation pneumonitis is suspected, patients undergo standard diagnostic procedures. If grade ≥ 2 pneumonitis is confirmed, medical intervention is indicated. The discriminative power of the score will be assessed by calculating the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC). If statistical significance of the AUC is reached, the optimal sum score to predict radiation pneumonitis will be established, which is defined as a cut-off value with sensitivity ≥90% and specificity ≥80%. Assuming a ratio between patients without and with pneumonitis of 3.63, a sample size of 93 patients is required in the full analysis set to yield statistical significance at the level of 5% with a power of 90% if the AUC under the alternative hypothesis is at least 0.9. Considering potential drop-outs, 98 patients should be recruited. If > 20% of patients are not satisfied with the score, modification is required. If the dissatisfaction rate is > 40%, the score is considered not useful. In 10 patients, functionality of a mobile application will be tested in addition to the paper-based questionnaire.DiscussionIf an optimal cut-off score resulting in sufficiently high sensitivity and specificity can be identified and the development of a symptom-based scoring system is successful, this tool will contribute to better identification of patients experiencing pneumonitis after radiotherapy for lung cancer.Trial registrationClinicaltrials.gov (NCT04335409); registered on 2nd of April, 2020.

Highlights

  • Pneumonitis is a possible side effect of radiotherapy for lung cancer

  • This study aims to develop a symptombased scoring system that contributes to an earlier detection of radiation pneumonitis requiring medical intervention after radiotherapy for lung cancer [6]

  • This scoring system is a prerequisite for a mobile application, which can be used by the patients at home to rate their symptoms possibly related to pneumonitis. This is a single-centre and single-arm prospective interventional study performed in an academic hospital, which aims to assess the performance of a new symptom-based score and to identify its optimal scoring point for detection of patients developing pneumonitis following radiotherapy for lung cancer

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Summary

Introduction

Pneumonitis is a possible side effect of radiotherapy for lung cancer. Most patients with small-cell lung cancer (SCLC) receive radiotherapy in combination with chemotherapy as definitive treatment [2]. Radiation pneumonitis is a possible side effect of radiotherapy for lung cancer. The prevalence of symptomatic radiation pneumonitis was 7.6% in patients irradiated for lung cancer [4]. Risk factors for radiation pneumonitis were identified including a mean radiation dose to the ipsilateral lung of > 20 Gy or a mean dose of > 13 Gy plus at least one other factor such as significant cardiovascular disease, history of heavy smoking (≥40 pack years), and systemic treatment (chemotherapy or immunotherapy) prior to or during radiotherapy [4]. The prevalence of symptomatic radiation pneumonitis in patients with such risk factors treated between 2016 and 2018 was 18.8%

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