Postoperative Radiotherapy for Patients With IIIA (N2) Non-small Cell Lung Cancer

Authors
Category Primary study
Registry of Trialsclinicaltrials.gov
Year 2009
Several important international randomized trials have shown that postoperative chemotherapy contributed to the improvement on 5 year survival rate by about 4% for patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) after complete resection. But the overall survival rate was relatively low and the local recurrence was still the dominant failure pattern for stage IIIA (N2) disease even these patients received the postoperative chemotherapy. Several meta-analyses have shown that postoperative radiotherapy (PORT) has no effect on the survival improvement for patients with NSCLC after complete resection. However, sub-group analysis based on the same dataset of these meta-analyses showed that the PORT with conventional radiotherapy might be beneficial for stage IIIA (N2) disease. The 3D conform radiotherapy (3D-CRT) and intensity modified radiotherapy (IMRT) can increase the radiation dose to the target volume while decreasing the dose to risk organs comparing with the conventional radiotherapy. So it is expected that PORT using 3D-CRT or IMRT after postoperative chemotherapy will improve the local control and survival for stage IIIA (N2) NSCLC. Here, the investigators designed a phase III randomized trial to compare the 3-year disease free survival (DFS) and overall survival (OS) rates in patients with completely resected stage IIIA (N2) NSCLC who receive adjuvant chemotherapy alone or adjuvant chemotherapy plus PORT.
Epistemonikos ID: 202f4c4f70d9072a53e081aeceb53cab379fc79c
First added on: May 05, 2024