ESTRO IORT Task Force/ACROP recommendations for intraoperative radiation therapy in borderline-resected pancreatic cancer

Radiation therapy (RT) is a valuable component of multimodal treatment for localized pancreatic cancer. Intraoperative radiation therapy (IORT) is a very precise RT modality to intensify the irradiation effect for cancer involving upper abdominal structures and organs, generally delivered with elect...

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Main Authors: Felipe A. Calvo, Jose M. Asencio, Falk Roeder, Robert Krempien, Philip Poortmans, Frank W. Hensley, Marco Krengli
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-07-01
Series:Clinical and Translational Radiation Oncology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405630820300409
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spelling doaj-e4520e6f70c44df3bc13731b20c83f9d2021-06-02T10:28:48ZengElsevierClinical and Translational Radiation Oncology2405-63082020-07-01239199ESTRO IORT Task Force/ACROP recommendations for intraoperative radiation therapy in borderline-resected pancreatic cancerFelipe A. Calvo0Jose M. Asencio1Falk Roeder2Robert Krempien3Philip Poortmans4Frank W. Hensley5Marco Krengli6Department of Oncology, Clínica Universidad de Navarra, Madrid, Spain; School of Medicine, Complutense University, Madrid, Spain; Corresponding author.Department of General Surgery, Hospital General Universitario Gregorio Marañón, Institute for Sanitary Research Gregorio Marañón (IiSGM), Madrid, Spain, Complutense University of Madrid, Madrid, SpainDepartment of Radiotherapy and Radio-Oncology, Paracelsus Medical University Hospital Salzburg, Landeskrankenhaus, Salzburg, Austria; CCU Molecular Radiation Oncology, German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ), Heidelberg, GermanyDepartment of Radiotherapy, Helios Hospital Berlin-Buch, Berlin, GermanyParis Sciences & Lettres PSL University, Paris, FranceDepartment of Radiation Oncology, University Hospital of Heidelberg, Heidelberg, GermanyRadiotherapy Unit, Department of Translation Medicine, University of Piemonte Orientale, Novara, ItalyRadiation therapy (RT) is a valuable component of multimodal treatment for localized pancreatic cancer. Intraoperative radiation therapy (IORT) is a very precise RT modality to intensify the irradiation effect for cancer involving upper abdominal structures and organs, generally delivered with electrons (IOERT). Unresectable, borderline and resectable disease categories benefit from dose-escalated chemoradiation strategies in the context of active systemic therapy and potential radical surgery. Prolonged preoperative treatment may act as a filter for selecting patients with occult resistant metastatic disease. Encouraging survival rates have been documented in patients treated with preoperative chemoradiation followed by radical surgery and IOERT (>20 months median survival, >35% survival at 3 years). Intensive preoperative treatment, including induction chemotherapy followed by chemoradiation and an IOERT boost, appears to prolong long-term survival within the subset of patients who remain relapse-free for>2 years (>30 months median survival; >40% survival at 3 years). Improvement of local control through higher RT doses has an impact on the survival of patients with a lower tendency towards disease spread. IOERT is a well-accepted approach in the clinical scenario (maturity and reproducibility of results), and extremely accurate in terms of dose-deposition characteristics and normal tissue sparing. The technique can be adapted to systemic therapy and surgical progress. International guidelines (National Comprehensive Cancer Network or NCCN guidelines) currently recommend use of IOERT in cases of close surgical margins and residual disease. We hereby report the ESTRO/ACROP recommendations for performing IOERT in borderline-resectable pancreatic cancer.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405630820300409Pancreatic cancerBorderlineIntraoperative radiotherapyIORTIOERTElectron beam
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Felipe A. Calvo
Jose M. Asencio
Falk Roeder
Robert Krempien
Philip Poortmans
Frank W. Hensley
Marco Krengli
spellingShingle Felipe A. Calvo
Jose M. Asencio
Falk Roeder
Robert Krempien
Philip Poortmans
Frank W. Hensley
Marco Krengli
ESTRO IORT Task Force/ACROP recommendations for intraoperative radiation therapy in borderline-resected pancreatic cancer
Clinical and Translational Radiation Oncology
Pancreatic cancer
Borderline
Intraoperative radiotherapy
IORT
IOERT
Electron beam
author_facet Felipe A. Calvo
Jose M. Asencio
Falk Roeder
Robert Krempien
Philip Poortmans
Frank W. Hensley
Marco Krengli
author_sort Felipe A. Calvo
title ESTRO IORT Task Force/ACROP recommendations for intraoperative radiation therapy in borderline-resected pancreatic cancer
title_short ESTRO IORT Task Force/ACROP recommendations for intraoperative radiation therapy in borderline-resected pancreatic cancer
title_full ESTRO IORT Task Force/ACROP recommendations for intraoperative radiation therapy in borderline-resected pancreatic cancer
title_fullStr ESTRO IORT Task Force/ACROP recommendations for intraoperative radiation therapy in borderline-resected pancreatic cancer
title_full_unstemmed ESTRO IORT Task Force/ACROP recommendations for intraoperative radiation therapy in borderline-resected pancreatic cancer
title_sort estro iort task force/acrop recommendations for intraoperative radiation therapy in borderline-resected pancreatic cancer
publisher Elsevier
series Clinical and Translational Radiation Oncology
issn 2405-6308
publishDate 2020-07-01
description Radiation therapy (RT) is a valuable component of multimodal treatment for localized pancreatic cancer. Intraoperative radiation therapy (IORT) is a very precise RT modality to intensify the irradiation effect for cancer involving upper abdominal structures and organs, generally delivered with electrons (IOERT). Unresectable, borderline and resectable disease categories benefit from dose-escalated chemoradiation strategies in the context of active systemic therapy and potential radical surgery. Prolonged preoperative treatment may act as a filter for selecting patients with occult resistant metastatic disease. Encouraging survival rates have been documented in patients treated with preoperative chemoradiation followed by radical surgery and IOERT (>20 months median survival, >35% survival at 3 years). Intensive preoperative treatment, including induction chemotherapy followed by chemoradiation and an IOERT boost, appears to prolong long-term survival within the subset of patients who remain relapse-free for>2 years (>30 months median survival; >40% survival at 3 years). Improvement of local control through higher RT doses has an impact on the survival of patients with a lower tendency towards disease spread. IOERT is a well-accepted approach in the clinical scenario (maturity and reproducibility of results), and extremely accurate in terms of dose-deposition characteristics and normal tissue sparing. The technique can be adapted to systemic therapy and surgical progress. International guidelines (National Comprehensive Cancer Network or NCCN guidelines) currently recommend use of IOERT in cases of close surgical margins and residual disease. We hereby report the ESTRO/ACROP recommendations for performing IOERT in borderline-resectable pancreatic cancer.
topic Pancreatic cancer
Borderline
Intraoperative radiotherapy
IORT
IOERT
Electron beam
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405630820300409
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