Pre-treatment proliferation and the outcome of conventional and accelerated radiotherapy

This study investigated the influence of pre-treatment proliferation characteristics, assessed by Ki-67 staining, in patients treated in the CHART trial of accelerated radiotherapy in head and neck cancer. Histological material from 402 patients was collected and stained for the presence and pattern...

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Veröffentlicht in:European journal of cancer (1990) 2006-02, Vol.42 (3), p.363-371
Hauptverfasser: Wilson, George D., Saunders, Michele I., Dische, Stanley, Daley, Frances M., Buffa, Francesca M., Richman, Paul I., Bentzen, Søren M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This study investigated the influence of pre-treatment proliferation characteristics, assessed by Ki-67 staining, in patients treated in the CHART trial of accelerated radiotherapy in head and neck cancer. Histological material from 402 patients was collected and stained for the presence and pattern of Ki-67 staining. Locoregional control and overall survival were the main clinical endpoints. Increasing Ki-67 positivity was associated with decreasing differentiation ( P < 0.001) and increasing N-stage ( P < 0.004). Increasing N-stage was also associated with the progression of proliferation pattern from marginal to random ( P < 0.001). Using a multivariate model, a trend was seen towards a greater benefit from CHART in the lower Ki-67 tumours ( P = 0.08); this became significant by pooling the low and intermediate Ki-67 groups in comparison with the high Ki-67 group ( P = 0.032). Tumours with marginal proliferation pattern showed a lower hazard ratio with CHART versus conventional for locoregional control ( P = 0.005). The data presented in this study do not support that a high pre-treatment Ki-67 is associated with a therapeutic benefit from accelerated radiotherapy.
ISSN:0959-8049
1879-0852
DOI:10.1016/j.ejca.2005.10.022