Abstract

SummaryBackgroundThe use of prophylactic radiotherapy to prevent procedure-tract metastases (PTMs) in malignant pleural mesothelioma remains controversial, and clinical practice varies worldwide. We aimed to compare prophylactic radiotherapy with deferred radiotherapy (given only when a PTM developed) in a suitably powered trial.MethodsWe did a multicentre, open-label, phase 3, randomised controlled trial in 22 UK hospitals of patients with histocytologically proven mesothelioma who had undergone large-bore pleural interventions in the 35 days prior to recruitment. Eligible patients were randomised (1:1), using a computer-generated sequence, to receive immediate radiotherapy (21 Gy in three fractions within 42 days of the pleural intervention) or deferred radiotherapy (same dose given within 35 days of PTM diagnosis). Randomisation was minimised by histological subtype, surgical versus non-surgical procedure, and pleural procedure (indwelling pleural catheter vs other). The primary outcome was the incidence of PTM within 7 cm of the site of pleural intervention within 12 months from randomisation, assessed in the intention-to-treat population. This trial is registered with ISRCTN, number ISRCTN72767336.FindingsBetween Dec 23, 2011, and Aug 4, 2014, we randomised 203 patients to receive immediate radiotherapy (n=102) or deferred radiotherapy (n=101). The patients were well matched at baseline. No significant difference was seen in PTM incidence in the immediate and deferred radiotherapy groups (nine [9%] vs 16 [16%]; odds ratio 0·51 [95% CI 0·19–1·32]; p=0·14). The only serious adverse event related to a PTM or radiotherapy was development of a painful PTM within the radiotherapy field that required hospital admission for symptom control in one patient who received immediate radiotherapy. Common adverse events of immediate radiotherapy were skin toxicity (grade 1 in 50 [54%] and grade 2 in four [4%] of 92 patients vs grade 1 in three [60%] and grade 2 in two [40%] of five patients in the deferred radiotherapy group who received radiotherapy for a PTM) and tiredness or lethargy (36 [39%] in the immediate radiotherapy group vs two [40%] in the deferred radiotherapy group) within 3 months of receiving radiotherapy.InterpretationRoutine use of prophylactic radiotherapy in all patients with mesothelioma after large-bore thoracic interventions is not justified.FundingResearch for Patient Benefit Programme from the UK National Institute for Health Research.

Highlights

  • Malignant pleural mesothelioma is an aggressive tumour with a poor prognosis, and few treatment options are available

  • We found three systematic reviews incorporating evidence from randomised trials and non-randomised studies; all three reviews concluded that there was insufficient evidence to recommend prophylactic radiotherapy in from three small randomised controlled trials[5,6,7] assessing its efficacy in reducing procedure-tract metastases (PTMs) are conflicting and showed substantial variation in PTM incidence

  • Added value of this study Our results show that prophylactic radiotherapy to large-bore pleural intervention sites does not confer benefits in terms of the rate of procedure-tract metastasis (PTM), chest pain, quality of life, analgesia use, or survival

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Summary

Introduction

Malignant pleural mesothelioma is an aggressive tumour with a poor prognosis, and few treatment options are available. A complication of these procedures is that the tumour can spread to the site of previous interventions, resulting in proceduretract metastases (PTMs). Mesothelioma is sensitive to radiation therapy in vitro,[4] but its use as a radical treatment is limited by the dose that can be delivered safely to thoracic organs at risk. Prophylactic radiotherapy to pleural intervention sites can be given with minimal side-effects; results www.thelancet.com/oncology Vol 17 August 2016. The use of prophylactic radiotherapy to prevent procedure-tract metastases (PTMs) in malignant pleural mesothelioma remains controversial, and clinical practice varies worldwide. We aimed to compare prophylactic radiotherapy with deferred radiotherapy (given only when a PTM developed) in a suitably powered trial

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