Tumour growth delay as a clinical endpoint for the measurement of radiation response.

Authors
Category Primary study
JournalRadiotherapy and oncology : journal of the European Society for Therapeutic Radiology and Oncology
Year 1986
Tumour growth delay has been investigated as an endpoint of radiation effect in selected patients with superficial metastases measured by calipers and ultrasound. Of 42 patients referred for study with two or more nodules, 17 were suitable for entry into protocols evaluating single or multifraction treatment. The reproducibility of tumour growth delay to the same dose schedule was evaluable in four patients and the sensitivity to 10-20% differences in total dose was evaluable in three patients. No significant size dependency was detected in the response of nodules to radiotherapy and the findings suggest that the growth delay endpoint is sensitive to 20% differences in radiation dose. Evaluable patients with multiple measurable nodules are uncommon but constitute a valuable resource for the testing of biological response modifiers, including radiosensitizers.
Epistemonikos ID: 398d0dc83c8e24a45a0870c46b0b65f373beae91
First added on: Sep 25, 2023