Precision association of lymphatic disease spread with radiation-associated toxicity in oropharyngeal squamous carcinomas

•582 oropharyngeal cancer patients under radiation treatment were analyzed.•We aim to predict post-treatment aspiration or gastronomy tube dependence.•Tumor spread patterns to head and neck lymph nodes were identified.•Patients were clustered based on their unique lymph node spread patterns.•Patient...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inRadiotherapy and oncology Vol. 161; pp. 152 - 158
Main Authors Wentzel, Andrew, Luciani, Timothy, van Dijk, Lisanne V., Taku, Nicolette, Elgohari, Baher, Mohamed, Abdallah S.R., Canahuate, Guadalupe, Fuller, Clifton D., Vock, David M., Elisabeta Marai, G.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Ireland Elsevier B.V 01.08.2021
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Summary:•582 oropharyngeal cancer patients under radiation treatment were analyzed.•We aim to predict post-treatment aspiration or gastronomy tube dependence.•Tumor spread patterns to head and neck lymph nodes were identified.•Patients were clustered based on their unique lymph node spread patterns.•Patient clustered were significantly correlated with dysphagia 6 months post treatment.•Lymph node spread patterns are an effective prognostic indicator of late toxicity. To determine whether patient similarity in terms of head and neck cancer spread through lymph nodes correlates significantly with radiation-associated toxicity. 582 head and neck cancer patients received radiotherapy for oropharyngeal cancer (OPC) and had non-metastatic affected lymph nodes in the head and neck. Affected lymph nodes were segmented from pretreatment contrast-enhanced tomography scans and categorized according to consensus guidelines. Similar patients were clustered into 4 groups according to a graph-based representation of disease spread through affected lymph nodes. Correlation between dysphagia-associated symptoms and patient groups was calculated. Out of 582 patients, 26% (152) experienced toxicity during a follow up evaluation 6 months after completion of radiotherapy treatment. Patient groups identified by our approach were significantly correlated with dysphagia, feeding tube, and aspiration toxicity (p < .0005). Our results suggest that structural geometry-aware characterization of affected lymph nodes can be used to better predict radiation-associated dysphagia at time of diagnosis, and better inform treatment guidelines. Our work successfully stratified a patient cohort into similar groups using a structural geometry, graph-encoding of affected lymph nodes in oropharyngeal cancer patients, that were predictive of late radiation-associated dysphagia and toxicity.
Bibliography:Spatial-Non-spatial Multi-Dimensional Analysis of Radiotherapy Treatment/Toxicity Team (SMART3)
Co-author specific contributions
All listed co-authors performed the following: Substantial contributions to the conception or design of the work;or the acquisition, analysis, or interpretation of data for the work;Drafting the work or revising it critically for important intellectual content;Final approval of the version to be published;Agreement to be accountable for all aspects of the work in ensuring that questions related to the accuracy or integrity of any part of the work are appropriately investigated and resolved. Specific additional individual cooperative effort contributions to study/manuscript design/execution/interpretation, in addition to all criteria above are listed as follows: AW, TL, GEM - designed and developed similarity measure, data extraction and curation, statistical analysis, and interpretationLVD, BE, ASRM, CDF - direct patient care provision, direct clinical data collection; interpretation and analytic supportGC - supervised statistical analysis, data extraction, and assisted with interpretationDV, CDF - analytic support, guarantor of statistical qualityAW, GC, LVD, ASRM, NT, CDF, GEM - manuscript writing and editingGC, CDF, GEM - primary investigator(s); conceived, coordinated, and directed all study activities, responsible for data collection, project integrity, manuscript content and editorial oversight and correspondence
ISSN:0167-8140
1879-0887
DOI:10.1016/j.radonc.2021.06.016