SBRT (stereotactic radiotherapy) can provide a higher dose to the target area without increasing the risk of surrounding normal tissue / organ injury in selective cases. At present, SBRT has been widely used in radiotherapy of lung cancer and it can also play a better local control for lung metastasis. However, there are parallel organs and series organs in the chest, and different organs have different tolerance to radiotherapy, so the toxicities of SBRT in different sites are different, and the prescription dose is also different. This study intends to make a detailed division of the chest region and explore the safety and efficacy of SBRT in different areas. It is divided into four types: chest wall type: the lesion is directly adjacent or overlapped with the chest wall; peripheral type: the lesion is more than 1cm away from the chest wall and more than 2cm away from the bronchial tree; central type: the lesion is less than 2cm away from the bronchial tree; ultral-central type: the lesion is directly adjacent or overlapped with the mediastinal structure. 48-60Gy / 4-10f (EQD2 = 62.5Gy \~ 99.7Gy) was given according to the location of the tumor. Main outcome measures are local progression free survival and radiation toxicities; secondary outcome measure is overall survival.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
120
The patients were treated with high-dose and low fractionated radiotherapy, using modern precision radiotherapy technology.
Peking University Third Hospital
Beijing, Beijing Municipality, China
RECRUITINGLocal progression free survival
The time from the date of SBRT to the date of local recurrence or death or the date of last observation.
Time frame: From the beginning of the treatment to 2 years after the treatment.
Toxicities
Adverse events of radiation of normal tissues (Including lung, trachea, bronchus, esophagus, blood vessels, ribs, spinal cord, brachial plexus).
Time frame: From the beginning of the treatment to 2 years after the treatment.
Overall survival
The time from the date of SBRT to the date of death from any cause or the date of last observation.
Time frame: From the beginning of the treatment to 2 years after the treatment.
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