Use of thoracic radiotherapy for extensive stage small-cell
lung cancer: a phase 3 randomised controlled trial
Ben J Slotman, Harm van Tinteren, John O Praag, Joost L Knegjens, Sherif Y El Sharouni, Matthew Hatton, Astrid Keijser, Corinne Faivre-Finn*,
Suresh Senan*
Summary
Background Most patients with extensive stage small-cell lung cancer (ES-SCLC) who undergo chemotherapy, and
prophylactic cranial irradiation, have persistent intrathoracic disease. We assessed thoracic radiotherapy for treatment
of this patient group.
Methods
We did this phase 3 randomised controlled trial at 42 hospitals: 16 in Netherlands, 22 in the UK, three in
Norway, and one in Belgium. We enrolled patients with WHO performance score 0–2 and confirmed ES-SCLC who
responded to chemotherapy. They were randomly assigned (1:1) to receive either thoracic radiotherapy (30 Gy in
ten fractions) or no thoracic radiotherapy. All underwent prophylactic cranial irradiation. The primary endpoint was
overall survival at 1 year in the intention-to-treat population. Secondary endpoints included progression-free survival.
This study is registered with the Nederlands Trial Register, number NTR1527.
Findings
We randomly assigned 498 patients between Feb 18, 2009, and Dec 21, 2012. Three withdrew informed
consent, leaving 247 patients in the thoracic radiotherapy group and 248 in the control group. Mean interval between
diagnosis and randomisation was 17 weeks. Median follow-up was 24 months. Overall survival at 1 year was not
significantly different between groups: 33% (95% CI 27–39) for the thoracic radiotherapy group versus 28% (95% CI
22–34) for the control group (hazard ratio [HR] 0·84, 95% CI 0·69–1·01; p=0·066). However, in a secondary analysis,
2-year overall survival was 13% (95% CI 9–19) versus 3% (95% CI 2–8; p=0·004). Progression was less likely in the
thoracic radiotherapy group than in the control group (HR 0·73, 95% CI 0·61–0·87; p=0·001). At 6 months,
progression-free survival was 24% (95% CI 19–30) versus 7% (95% CI 4–11; p=0·001). We recorded no severe toxic
effects. The most common grade 3 or higher toxic effects were fatigue (11 vs 9) and dyspnoea (three vs four).
Interpretation
Thoracic radiotherapy in addition to prophylactic cranial irradiation should be considered for all
patients with ES-SCLC who respond to chemotherapy.
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