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Annual Report 2019

Department of Radiation Oncology

Tetsuo Akimoto, Naoki Nakamura, Sadatomo Zenda, Atsushi Motegi, Hidehiro Hojo, Masaki Nakamura, Yasuhiro Hirano, Shun-ichiro Kageyama, Masayuki Okumura

Introduction

 Radiotherapy (RT) plays an essential role in the management of cancer patients. It is used as (1) a curative treatment for many patients with loco-regional localized malignant disease, (2) integrated therapy combined with chemotherapy and/or surgery, and (3) palliative treatment for patients for whom curative treatment is not an option. In radiotherapeutic approaches, the radiation dose to the loco-regional tumor must be as high as possible, while the dose to the surrounding normal tissues should be kept as low as possible in order to keep the severity of radiation-related complications within an acceptable level.

 The primary aim of the Department of Radiation Oncology is to develop high-precision RT such as intensity modulated radiation therapy (IMRT), image-guided radiation therapy (IGRT), stereotactic body RT (SBRT), and proton beam therapy (PBT), and establish the definitive role of RT in cancer treatment. Another important goal is to establish standard treatments for various cancers and optimal irradiation techniques including total dose, fractionation, and radiation fields.

The Team and What We Do

 At present, the staff of the Department of Radiation Oncology consists of seven consultant physicians (radiation oncologists), 19 radiation technologists, four medical physicists, one nurse, and one clerk. We have more than 1,000 new cases for conventional RT and more than 300 new patients for PBT every year. Quality assurance of both conventional RT and PBT is performed by medical physicists and radiation technologists, and a conference on verification of treatment planning is held every morning in addition to a weekly work conference regarding research activities. RT and PBT are routinely based on three-dimensional radiation therapy planning and PBT using RT-dedicated multi-detector-row helical computed tomography (CT) scanning in order to confirm the precise radiation dose to administer to the targeted tumors. Respiratory gating has been applied especially in radiotherapeutic management for patients with lung, esophagus, and liver cancers.

 Selection of treatment approaches is determined through clinical conferences between radiation oncologists, surgical oncologists, and medical oncologists. Many clinical trials involving RT as the sole or combined treatment modalities for various cancers are now in progress.

 Our department is responsible for conventional (photon-electron) RT that consists of four linear accelerators, a CT simulator, four treatment planning computer workstations, and other important devices. IMRT and IGRT have been routinely applied for head and neck cancer and prostate cancer. Our department is also responsible for PBT that is composed of seven operating staff members and one technician for fabricating the compensator and aperture; they are sent from manufacturing companies and work in collaboration with other staff members of our department. PBT consists of two treatment rooms, and both rooms are routinely used for rotational gantry treatment. Our department ensures quality assurance and regular maintenance of the PBT machines for precise dose delivery and safe treatment.

Table 1. Number of patients treated with radiation therapy during 2014-2019
Table 1.  Number of patients treated with radiation therapy during 2014-2019

Table 1. Number of patients treated with radiation therapy during 2014-2019
Table 1.  Number of patients treated with radiation therapy during 2014-2019

Research activities

 In the Department of Radiation Oncology, the following research activities are in progress.

1) Establishment of optimal combined approaches including RT and chemotherapy for locally advanced head and neck cancer, non-small cell lung cancer and esophageal cancer, and so on

2) Establishment of clinical usefulness of IMRT for head and neck cancer, localized prostate cancer, and cervical esophageal cancer

3) Hypofractionated IMRT for localized prostate cancer

4) Hypofractionated PBT for localized prostate cancer

5) Evaluation of feasibility of PBT combined with chemotherapy for inoperable locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer and locally advanced esophageal cancer

6) Evaluation of long-term complications after PBT for pediatric malignancies

7) The role of gene polymorphism in development of acute and late radiation-related complications

8) Exploration of biomarkers for head and neck cancer

9) Radiobiological investigation of cellular response to radiation and proton beams

10) Efficacy of liquid biopsy in patients with oligometastases.

Clinical trials

 The following in-house and multi-institutional clinical trials are in progress.

1) The Japan Clinical Oncology Group (JCOG) 0701: A phase III study of accelerated fractionation vs. conventional fractionation radiation therapy for glottic cancer of T1-2N0M0

2) JCOG0701-A1: Evaluation of single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in development of acute and late complications after accelerated fractionation and/or conventional fractionation radiation therapy for glottic cancer of T1-2N0M0

3) JCOG1015: A phase II study of intensity modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) with chemotherapy for loco-regionally advanced nasopharyngeal cancer (NPC)

4) Phase II trial of concurrent chemoradiotherapy with 5-FU plus cisplatin for resectable squamous cell carcinoma of cervical esophagus

5) The Japanese Radiation Oncology Study Group (JROSG) phase II trial of IMRT with concurrent chemoradiotherapy for resectable squamous cell carcinoma of cervical esophagus

6) JCOG1208: A non-randomized confirmatory study of intensity modulated radiation therapy(IMRT) for T1-2N0-1M0 oropharyngeal cancer

7) JCOG1008: Phase II/III trial of postoperative chemoradiotherapy comparing 3-weekly cisplatin with weekly cisplatin in high-risk patients with squamous cell carcinoma of head and neck

8) Dose escalation study of PBT combined with concurrent chemotherapy for locally advanced esophageal cancer

9) JCOG1408: Phase III study of SBRT for stage I non-small cell lung cancer

10) JCOG1315C: Non-randomized prospective comparative study between surgical resection and proton beam therapy for resectable hepatocellular carcinoma

11) JCOG1801: A phase III randomized controlled trial comparing surgery plus adjuvant chemotherapy with preoperative chemoradiotherapy followed by surgery plus adjuvant chemotherapy for locally recurrent rectal cancer

12) JCOG1806: Avoid MAstectomy using Trastuzumab, pertuzumab and RAdiation Study for Breast Cancer (AMATERAS-BC)

Education

 We established an education and training system for residents and junior radiation oncologists through clinical conferences and lectures on radiation oncology, physics, and radiation biology. In addition, a training course regarding quality assurance of radiation therapy has been regularly held for medical physicists and radiological technologists.

Future prospects

 We are now aiming at the establishment of a system that can provide high-quality and safe high-precision radiation therapy. In addition, we would like to promote the research and development of innovative technologies regarding RT, radiation biology, and medical physics.

List of papers published in 2019

Journal

1. Kageyama SI, Junyan D, Hojo H, Motegi A, Nakamura M, Tsuchihara K, Akimoto T. PARP inhibitor olaparib sensitizes esophageal carcinoma cells to fractionated proton irradiation. J Radiat Res, 61:177-186, 2020

2. Hojo H, Raturi V, Nakamura N, Arahira S, Akita T, Mitsunaga S, Nakamura M, Motegi A, Kageyama SI, Zenda S, Okumura M, Ikeda M, Akimoto T. Impact of Proton Beam Irradiation of an Anatomic Subsegment of the Liver for Hepatocellular Carcinoma. Pract Radiat Oncol, 10:e264-e271, 2020

3. Imamura Y, Kiyota N, Ogawa G, Akimoto T, Fujii M, Hanai N, Iwae S, Monden N, Matsuura K, Onozawa Y, Hayashi R, Tahara M. Nutritional support dependence after curative chemoradiotherapy in head and neck cancer: supplementary analysis of a phase II trial (JCOG0706S1). Jpn J Clin Oncol, 49:1009-1015, 2019

4. Nakamura M, Kageyama SI, Niho S, Okumura M, Hojo H, Motegi A, Nakamura N, Zenda S, Yoh K, Goto K, Akimoto T. Impact of EGFR Mutation and ALK Translocation on Recurrence Pattern After Definitive Chemoradiotherapy for Inoperable Stage III Non-squamous Non-small-cell Lung Cancer. Clin Lung Cancer, 20:e256-e264, 2019

5. Kibe Y, Nakamura N, Kuno H, Hiyama T, Hayashi R, Zenda S, Motegi A, Hojo H, Nakamura M, Ariji T, Oyoshi H, Akimoto T. Frequency and predictors of detecting early locoregional recurrence/disease progression of oral squamous cell carcinoma with high-risk factors on imaging tests before postoperative adjuvant radiotherapy. Int J Clin Oncol, 24:1182-1189, 2019

6. Hojo H, Dohmae T, Hotta K, Kageyama SI, Baba H, Kohno R, Motegi A, Tsuchihara K, Akimoto T. Effect of 5-fluorouracil on cellular response to proton beam in esophageal cancer cell lines according to the position of spread-out Bragg peak. Acta Oncol, 58:475-482, 2019

7. Nishio T, Tachibana H, Kase Y, Hotta K, Nakamura M, Tamura M, Terunuma T, Toshito T, Yamashita H, Ishikura S, Fuji H, Akimoto T, Nishimura Y. Liver phantom design and dosimetric verification in participating institutions for a proton beam therapy in patients with resectable hepatocellular carcinoma: Japan Clinical Oncology Group trial (JCOG1315C). Radiother Oncol, 140:98-104, 2019