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Radiotherapy and fibromatosis Martin Robinson 2008
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Page 1: Radiotherapy And Fibromatosis

Radiotherapy and fibromatosis

Martin Robinson 2008

Page 2: Radiotherapy And Fibromatosis
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Copyright © 2006 by the American Roentgen Ray Society

Lee, J. C. et al. Am. J. Roentgenol. 2006;186:247-254

--28-year-old woman who presented with painful lump in upper arm

Page 4: Radiotherapy And Fibromatosis

Copyright © 2007 by the American Roentgen Ray Society

Lee, J. C. et al. Am. J. Roentgenol. 2006;186:247-254

--60-year-old man who presented with incidental finding on conventional radiography

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McCollough 1991 – response to RT

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Park RT

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Park case 2

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S u r g e r y v e r s u s R a d ia t io n Th e r a p y f o r P a t ie n t s w it h

Ag g r e s s iv e F ib r o m a t o s is o r D e s m o id Tu m o r s

2 2 A C o m p a r a t iv e R e v ie w o f A r t ic le s

Nuttyens 2000

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Nuttyens

Dose Radiotherapy 10 - 72Gy

Median follow up 5-10 years.

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1 0

Surgery 381

Radiation 102

S + RT

297

Nuttyens

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LOCAL CONTROL Fibromatosis meta-analysis

0

25

50

75

100

Free margins Positive margins Unknown margins

SurgeryS + RTRT

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Effect of RT on local relapse

28% 59%

6% 25%

free margins +ve margins

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Percentage Local control according Primary or Recurrent Fibromatosis

.0

22.5

45.0

67.5

90.0

Primary Recurrent Unknown

SurgerySurgery + RTRT aloneall having RT

% local control

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Local control according to Primary/Recurrent and Margins

0

25

50

75

100

Free Primary Free Recurrence Positive primary Positive recurrence

SurgerySurgery +RT

% local control

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Overall local control 70-80%

Whether primary or recurrent disease

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Location and frequency of recurrences after radiotherapy

0

15

30

45

60

RT alone Surgery + RT Surgery + RT or RTalone

Total (%)

In fieldMarginalOut of field

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Percentage of in field recurrences by dose

0

15

30

45

60

RT alone Surgery + RT Total

<50Gy50-59Gy>60Gy

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Nuyttens review

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Zelefsky 1991 – role of brachytherapy in 38 patients with desmoid tumours.

Previous recurrence 75%Size >8cm 50%Gross residual disease post-op

16%

Marginal resection 79%

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Zelefsky 1991 - results

Overall local control 66%

In-field local control rate 75%

Recurrence at periphery implant 4/12

Recurrence >3cm from treated volume 4/12

Local control at 5 years after salvage including 2 amputations

95%

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Radiotherapy research

EORTC - Phase II study of moderate dose radiotherapy for inoperable aggressive fibromatosis. 56 Gy in 28 fractions 2 Gy per fraction 5

fractions per week Local control, defined as absence of local

progression 3 years after registration Proposed trial of adjuvant radiotherapy

following surgery for same circa 2003. IGRT sarcoma.

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EORTC aggressive fibromatosis accrual

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Hong 2004

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3d-CRT v IMRT Hong 2004

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NCI patient information for treatment of Paediatric desmoid

Treatment of desmoid tumour will be surgery whenever possible.

If surgery to completely remove the tumour is not possible, treatment may include the following:

External Radiation therapy to shrink the tumour before surgery.

Internal radiation therapy to kill any remaining tumour cells after surgery.

A non steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID). Antiestrogen therapy. Chemotherapy.

Watchful waiting. A clinical trial of targeted drug therapy with

imatinib (Gleevec).

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Conclusions

Individualised treatment plan to balance risks of disease and surgery/radiotherapy.

Often fail locally despite clear surgical margin.

Gross local disease may remain quiescent.

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Conclusions

Consider conservative therapy or observation for lesions which have not already recurred or behaved aggressively.

Previous recurrence or multifocal presentation may predict worse prognosis.

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Radiotherapy

Radiotherapy improves recurrence free survival particularly where positive surgical margins or previous recurrence.

May be first choice therapy where surgery would result in major functional deficit.

Need to use an adequate margin e.g 5-7cm. Indications to be balanced against significant risk of

inducing malignancy particularly in young.