Prognostic factors for local control and survival after radiotherapy of metastatic spinal cord compression.

Standard

Prognostic factors for local control and survival after radiotherapy of metastatic spinal cord compression. / Rades, Dirk; Fehlauer, Fabian; Schulte, Rainer; Veninga, Theo; Stalpers, Lukas J A; Basic, Hiba; Bajrovic, Amira; Hoskin, Peter J; Tribius, Silke; Wildfang, Ingeborg; Rudat, Volker; Engenhart-Cabilic, Rita; Karstens, Johann H; Alberti, Winfried; Dunst, Juergen; Schild, Steven E.

In: J CLIN ONCOL, Vol. 24, No. 21, 21, 2006, p. 3388-3393.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Rades, D, Fehlauer, F, Schulte, R, Veninga, T, Stalpers, LJA, Basic, H, Bajrovic, A, Hoskin, PJ, Tribius, S, Wildfang, I, Rudat, V, Engenhart-Cabilic, R, Karstens, JH, Alberti, W, Dunst, J & Schild, SE 2006, 'Prognostic factors for local control and survival after radiotherapy of metastatic spinal cord compression.', J CLIN ONCOL, vol. 24, no. 21, 21, pp. 3388-3393. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16849752?dopt=Citation>

APA

Rades, D., Fehlauer, F., Schulte, R., Veninga, T., Stalpers, L. J. A., Basic, H., Bajrovic, A., Hoskin, P. J., Tribius, S., Wildfang, I., Rudat, V., Engenhart-Cabilic, R., Karstens, J. H., Alberti, W., Dunst, J., & Schild, S. E. (2006). Prognostic factors for local control and survival after radiotherapy of metastatic spinal cord compression. J CLIN ONCOL, 24(21), 3388-3393. [21]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16849752?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Rades D, Fehlauer F, Schulte R, Veninga T, Stalpers LJA, Basic H et al. Prognostic factors for local control and survival after radiotherapy of metastatic spinal cord compression. J CLIN ONCOL. 2006;24(21):3388-3393. 21.

Bibtex

@article{6be0c32793c74aa08c71f032463db10c,
title = "Prognostic factors for local control and survival after radiotherapy of metastatic spinal cord compression.",
abstract = "PURPOSE: To evaluate potential prognostic factors for local control and survival after radiotherapy of metastatic spinal cord compression (MSCC). PATIENTS AND METHODS: The following potential prognostic factors were investigated retrospectively in 1,852 patients irradiated for MSCC: age, sex, performance status, primary tumor, interval between tumor diagnosis and MSCC ( 15 months), number of involved vertebrae (one to two v > or = three), other bone metastases, visceral metastases, pretreatment ambulatory status, time of developing motor deficits before radiotherapy (faster, 1 to 14 v slower, > 14 days), and radiation schedule (short-course v long-course radiotherapy). RESULTS: On univariate analysis, improved local control of MSCC was associated significantly with favorable histology (breast cancer, prostate cancer, lymphoma/myeloma), no visceral metastases, and long-course radiotherapy. On multivariate analysis, absence of visceral metastases and radiation schedule maintained significance. On univariate analysis, improved survival was associated significantly with female sex, favorable histology, no visceral or other bone metastases, good performance status, being ambulatory before radiotherapy, longer interval between tumor diagnosis and MSCC, and slower development of motor deficits before radiotherapy. Long-course radiotherapy showed a trend. On multivariate analysis, histology, visceral metastases, other bone metastases, ambulatory status before radiotherapy, interval between tumor diagnosis and MSCC, and time of developing motor deficits maintained significance. CONCLUSION: Poorer local control after radiotherapy for MSCC is associated with visceral metastases and short-course radiotherapy. Long-course radiotherapy seems preferable for patients with more favorable prognoses, given that these patients may live long enough to develop MSCC recurrences. Long-term survival after radiotherapy for MSCC may be predicted if several prognostic factors are considered.",
author = "Dirk Rades and Fabian Fehlauer and Rainer Schulte and Theo Veninga and Stalpers, {Lukas J A} and Hiba Basic and Amira Bajrovic and Hoskin, {Peter J} and Silke Tribius and Ingeborg Wildfang and Volker Rudat and Rita Engenhart-Cabilic and Karstens, {Johann H} and Winfried Alberti and Juergen Dunst and Schild, {Steven E}",
year = "2006",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "24",
pages = "3388--3393",
journal = "J CLIN ONCOL",
issn = "0732-183X",
publisher = "American Society of Clinical Oncology",
number = "21",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Prognostic factors for local control and survival after radiotherapy of metastatic spinal cord compression.

AU - Rades, Dirk

AU - Fehlauer, Fabian

AU - Schulte, Rainer

AU - Veninga, Theo

AU - Stalpers, Lukas J A

AU - Basic, Hiba

AU - Bajrovic, Amira

AU - Hoskin, Peter J

AU - Tribius, Silke

AU - Wildfang, Ingeborg

AU - Rudat, Volker

AU - Engenhart-Cabilic, Rita

AU - Karstens, Johann H

AU - Alberti, Winfried

AU - Dunst, Juergen

AU - Schild, Steven E

PY - 2006

Y1 - 2006

N2 - PURPOSE: To evaluate potential prognostic factors for local control and survival after radiotherapy of metastatic spinal cord compression (MSCC). PATIENTS AND METHODS: The following potential prognostic factors were investigated retrospectively in 1,852 patients irradiated for MSCC: age, sex, performance status, primary tumor, interval between tumor diagnosis and MSCC ( 15 months), number of involved vertebrae (one to two v > or = three), other bone metastases, visceral metastases, pretreatment ambulatory status, time of developing motor deficits before radiotherapy (faster, 1 to 14 v slower, > 14 days), and radiation schedule (short-course v long-course radiotherapy). RESULTS: On univariate analysis, improved local control of MSCC was associated significantly with favorable histology (breast cancer, prostate cancer, lymphoma/myeloma), no visceral metastases, and long-course radiotherapy. On multivariate analysis, absence of visceral metastases and radiation schedule maintained significance. On univariate analysis, improved survival was associated significantly with female sex, favorable histology, no visceral or other bone metastases, good performance status, being ambulatory before radiotherapy, longer interval between tumor diagnosis and MSCC, and slower development of motor deficits before radiotherapy. Long-course radiotherapy showed a trend. On multivariate analysis, histology, visceral metastases, other bone metastases, ambulatory status before radiotherapy, interval between tumor diagnosis and MSCC, and time of developing motor deficits maintained significance. CONCLUSION: Poorer local control after radiotherapy for MSCC is associated with visceral metastases and short-course radiotherapy. Long-course radiotherapy seems preferable for patients with more favorable prognoses, given that these patients may live long enough to develop MSCC recurrences. Long-term survival after radiotherapy for MSCC may be predicted if several prognostic factors are considered.

AB - PURPOSE: To evaluate potential prognostic factors for local control and survival after radiotherapy of metastatic spinal cord compression (MSCC). PATIENTS AND METHODS: The following potential prognostic factors were investigated retrospectively in 1,852 patients irradiated for MSCC: age, sex, performance status, primary tumor, interval between tumor diagnosis and MSCC ( 15 months), number of involved vertebrae (one to two v > or = three), other bone metastases, visceral metastases, pretreatment ambulatory status, time of developing motor deficits before radiotherapy (faster, 1 to 14 v slower, > 14 days), and radiation schedule (short-course v long-course radiotherapy). RESULTS: On univariate analysis, improved local control of MSCC was associated significantly with favorable histology (breast cancer, prostate cancer, lymphoma/myeloma), no visceral metastases, and long-course radiotherapy. On multivariate analysis, absence of visceral metastases and radiation schedule maintained significance. On univariate analysis, improved survival was associated significantly with female sex, favorable histology, no visceral or other bone metastases, good performance status, being ambulatory before radiotherapy, longer interval between tumor diagnosis and MSCC, and slower development of motor deficits before radiotherapy. Long-course radiotherapy showed a trend. On multivariate analysis, histology, visceral metastases, other bone metastases, ambulatory status before radiotherapy, interval between tumor diagnosis and MSCC, and time of developing motor deficits maintained significance. CONCLUSION: Poorer local control after radiotherapy for MSCC is associated with visceral metastases and short-course radiotherapy. Long-course radiotherapy seems preferable for patients with more favorable prognoses, given that these patients may live long enough to develop MSCC recurrences. Long-term survival after radiotherapy for MSCC may be predicted if several prognostic factors are considered.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 24

SP - 3388

EP - 3393

JO - J CLIN ONCOL

JF - J CLIN ONCOL

SN - 0732-183X

IS - 21

M1 - 21

ER -