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Proton
Therapy and Concurrent Chemotherapy may
reduce Bone Marrow Toxicity in advanced Lung
Cancer Patients
Newswise — Patients treated for locally advanced non-small
cell lung cancer who receive chemotherapy
and proton beam therapy have fewer instances
of bone marrow toxicity than patients who
receive the standard treatment of
intensity-modulated radiation (IMRT) and
concurrent chemotherapy, according to
researchers from The University of Texas M.
D. Anderson Cancer Center.
The findings were reported today at the 2008 Chicago
Multidisciplinary Symposium in Thoracic
Oncology, sponsored by ASTRO, ASCO, IASLC
and the University of Chicago.
It is the first study to examine the benefits of proton
beam therapy and concurrent chemotherapy in
advanced lung cancer patients.
The conventional treatment for locally advanced non-small
cell lung cancer is intensity-modulated
radiation with concurrent chemotherapy.
The majority of lung cancer patients who receive this
therapy are at risk of bone marrow toxicity,
a debilitating side effect of treatment that
further weakens a patient's already
vulnerable immune system.
The occurrence of bone marrow toxicity - the reduction of
hemoglobin, neutrophils, lymphocytes and
white blood cells - results in a patient's
inability to withstand aggressive treatment,
rendering it less effective. This condition
often leads to infection, bleeding, fatigue
and even death.
Researchers compared bone marrow toxicity levels in 142
patients treated for lung cancer between
January 2003 and June 2008.
All of the patients received chemotherapy; IMRT was
administered to 75, while 67 were treated
with proton beam therapy.
After 17 months, patients treated with concurrent
chemotherapy and proton beam therapy
experienced significantly less reduction in
hemoglobin (0% vs. 4%), neutrophils (4% vs.
17%) and lymphocytes (54% vs. 87%) when
compared to those treated with CT and IMRT.
These differences remained when the gross tumor volume was
considered.
"Our goal is to find the best way to treat the cancer
without further weakening the patient," said
Ritsuko Komaki, M.D., professor in M. D.
Anderson's Division of Radiation Oncology
and lead author on the study. "Standard care
currently provides a 25 percent five-year
survival rate.
"But as a physician, I have seen how treatment affects
patients' overall health: they are tired,
suffer from night sweats, are prone to
infection and have to compromise their
treatment.
"With proton therapy, we may now have an option that lessens
this toxicity so that treatment dosage can
be maximized."
Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death in the
United States, according to the American
Cancer Society.
In 2008, approximately 215,000 people will be diagnosed
with lung cancer and approximately 114,000
people will die from the disease.
Proton beam therapy ionizes cancer cells by stripping away
their electrons, consequently mutating the
cells' DNA so that they cannot divide and
proliferate.
Protons are significantly heavier than X-rays, allowing
them to travel in a straight path through
the body without being deflected.
While radiation therapy destroys both the tumor and the
healthy tissue surrounding it, proton
therapy can target a tumor precisely with
little damage to normal tissue.
"This study suggests that proton beam therapy may benefit
patients who are extremely vulnerable to
bone marrow toxicity," said James Cox, M.D.,
professor and head of the Division of
Radiation Oncology and the study's senior
author.
"Proton therapy may promise safer and more effective
treatment for children, whose bone marrow is
still developing, and elderly patients who
are more prone to complications and cannot
withstand aggressive treatment."
M. D. Anderson is currently working with Massachusetts
General Hospital to enroll patients in an
NCI-approved randomized prospective clinical
trial to confirm these initial findings.
In addition to Komaki and Cox, M. D. Anderson researchers
contributing to this study include Samir V.
Sejpal, M.D., Xiong Wei M.D., Pamela Allen
Ph.D., Richard Amos M.Sc., Radhe Mohan,
Ph.D., Joe Y. Chang M.D., Zhongxing Liao,
M.D., and Lei Dong, Ph.D., from the
Departments of Radiation Oncology, Radiation
Physics, and Biostatistics and Applied
Mathematics.
Also at the conference, Cox presented his study on proton
beam therapy and its effects on tissue
toxicity.
About M. D. Anderson
The University of Texas M. D. Anderson
Cancer Center in Houston ranks as one of the
world's most respected centers focused on
cancer patient care, research, education and
prevention. M. D. Anderson is one of only 41
Comprehensive Cancer Centers designated by
the National Cancer Institute.
For four of the past six years, M. D. Anderson has ranked
No. 1 in cancer care in "America's Best
Hospitals," a survey published annually in
U.S. News and World Report.
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