Abstract

During coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)-related operating room closures, some multidisciplinary thoracic oncology teams adopted a paradigm of stereotactic ablative radiotherapy (SABR) as a bridge to surgery, an approach called SABR-BRIDGE. This study presents the preliminary surgical and pathological results. Eligible participants from four institutions (three in Canada and one in the United States) had early-stage presumed or biopsy-proven lung malignancy that would normally be surgically resected. SABR was delivered using standard institutional guidelines, with surgery >3months following SABR with standardized pathologic assessment. Pathological complete response (pCR) was defined as absence of viable cancer. Major pathologic response (MPR) was defined as ≤10% viable tissue. Seventy-two patients underwent SABR. Most common SABR regimens were 34Gy/1 (29%, n=21), 48Gy/3-4 (26%, n=19), and 50/55Gy/5 (22%, n=16). SABR was well-tolerated, with one grade 5 toxicity (death 10days after SABR with COVID-19) and five grade 2-3 toxicities. Following SABR, 26 patients underwent resection thus far (13 pending surgery). Median time-to-surgery was 4.5months post-SABR (range, 2-17.5months). Surgery was reported as being more difficult because of SABR in 38% (n=10) of cases. Thirteen patients (50%) had pCR and 19 (73%) had MPR. Rates of pCR trended higher in patients operated on at earlier time points (75% if within 3months, 50% if 3-6months, and 33% if ≥6months; p=.069). In the exploratory best-case scenario analysis, pCR rate does not exceed 82%. The SABR-BRIDGE approach allowed for delivery of treatment during a period of operating room closure and was well-tolerated. Even in the best-case scenario, pCR rate does not exceed 82%.

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