(P047) The Role of Radiation Therapy Following Adjuvant Chemotherapy in Pancreatic Adenocarcinoma
April 30th 2015We discerned no significant improvements with the addition of radiation therapy in these patients with resected pancreatic adenocarcinoma treated with modern adjuvant chemotherapy, but statistical power was limited. The eventual results of the ongoing Radiation Therapy Oncology Group (RTOG) study RTOG 0848 will provide definitive data regarding the appropriate role for radiation in the era of modern adjuvant chemotherapy.
(P048) Mutational Analysis by Next-Generation Sequencing in Patients With Pancreatic Adenocarcinoma
April 30th 2015Novel mutations were identified in the majority of patients, including mutations within a number of genes that have the potential to influence KRAS-mediated signaling, as well as other prominent signaling pathways. These results could potentially serve to identify targets for novel chemotherapeutic agents and guide personalized, combinatorial therapy in appropriately selected patients.
(P052) Human Papillomavirus in Esophageal Cancer: An Institutional Retrospective Analysis
April 30th 2015There was no HPV oncogene expression in our patient cohort, which corresponds with a low-to-no prevalence of esophageal HPV infection in a population of patients in the United States. However, further studies including a larger patient cohort with pretreatment tissue analysis would still be helpful in determining the true prevalence of HPV in esophageal cancer. Patients who are treated with trimodality therapy experienced a high rate of pathologic response.
(P054) Carbon Ion Therapy for Chinese Patients With Prostate Cancer: Primary Reports
April 30th 2015This is the first report about a Chinese population with prostate cancer treated with carbon ion therapy. Our primary data showed that carbon ion therapy was well tolerated, and the immediate effect was encouraging. Long-term follow-up is needed for the analysis of final treatment responses and toxicities.
(P094) Treatment Outcomes of Sinonasal Neuroendocrine Cancer: A Retrospective Review
April 30th 2015Sinonasal neuroendocrine tumors are a challenging group of diseases to manage, due to their rarity and heterogeneous natural histories. New multimodality strategies need to be explored to potentially enhance outcomes, especially in non-ONB histologies.
(P102) Surgery Improves Survival in 14,228 Patients With Malignant Pleural Mesothelioma
April 30th 2015Despite developments in surgery, perioperative management, and radiotherapy, the prognosis for MPM patients has not improved over the past four decades. In this SEER study of 14,228 patients over 36 years, cancer-directed surgery was associated with better survival in MPM, independent of other prognostic factors. These data support the role of surgery-based therapy as the cornerstone of treatment for this challenging disease.
(P103) A New Score Predicts Survival in Patients With Non–Small-Cell Lung Cancer
April 30th 2015Prognostic factors that were significantly associated with survival on both UV and MV analyses were used to construct a valid scoring system that can be used to predict survival of NSCLC patients. The score can be used for trial stratification or for choosing patients specifically for high-risk trials. Optimally, this score will be helpful when counseling patients and designing future trials.
(P105) Community-Based Early-Stage Treatment (BEST) Outcomes for NSCLC
April 30th 2015LC, survival, and toxicity of stage I NSCLC treated with SBRT in this community setting are comparable to those reported in university and multi-institutional trials. The efficacy, safety, and convenience of SBRT have been translated to a large cohort of patients in an outpatient community cancer center. These results also indicate that doses < 60 Gy delivered in five fractions may be less effective at achieving LC. As lower doses are examined in central lesions, it will be important to closely evaluate any possible reduction in LC.
(P107) Vero SBRT Treatment of Moving Lung Tumors
April 30th 2015Overall, 40%-thresholded 18F-FDG PET contours nonsignificantly enlarge PTVs when multiphase free-breathing, inspiration, and expiration breath-hold scans are used for Vero SBRT. Whether 18F-FDG PET contours improve local control of moving lung tumors treated by Vero SBRT needs further study.