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©The Author(s) 2021.
World J Clin Oncol. Aug 24, 2021; 12(8): 581-608
Published online Aug 24, 2021. doi: 10.5306/wjco.v12.i8.581
Published online Aug 24, 2021. doi: 10.5306/wjco.v12.i8.581
Table 1 Infectious Diseases Society of America levels of evidence and grades of recommendation and European Society of Medical Oncology adaptation
| IDSA United States Public Health Service Grading System for Ranking Recommendations in Clinical Guidelines | ESMO adaptation of IDSA Grading System | ||
| Category, grade | Definition | Category, grade | Definition |
| Strength of recommendation | Grades of recommendation | ||
| A | Good evidence to support recommendation for use | A | Strong evidence for efficacy with a substantial clinical benefit, strongly recommended, strongly recommended |
| B | Moderate evidence to support recommendation for use | B | Strong or moderate evidence for efficacy but with a limited clinical benefit, generally recommended |
| C | Poor evidence to support a recommendation | C | Insufficient evidence for efficacy or benefit does not outweigh the risk or the disadvantages (adverse events, costs, etc.), optional |
| D | Moderate evidence to support a recommendation against use | D | Moderate evidence against efficacy or for adverse outcome, generally not recommended |
| E | Good evidence to support a recommendation against use | E | Strong evidence against efficacy or for adverse outcome, never recommended |
| Quality of evidence | Levels of evidence | ||
| I | Evidence from > 1 properly randomized, controlled trial | I | Evidence from at least one large randomized, controlled trial of good methodological quality (low potential for bias) or meta-analyses of well-conducted randomized trials without heterogeneity |
| II | Evidence from > 1 well-designed clinical trial, without randomization; from cohort or case-controlled analytic studies (preferably from > 1 center); from multiple time series; or from dramatic results from uncontrolled experiments | II | Small randomized trials or large randomized trials with a suspicion of bias (lower methodological quality) or meta-analyses of such trials or of trials with demonstrated heterogeneity |
| III | Evidence from opinions of respected authorities, based on clinical experience, descriptive studies, or reports of expert committees | III | Prospective cohort studies |
| IV | Retrospective cohort studies or case-control studies | ||
| V | Studies without control group, case reports, experts opinions | ||
Table 2 Recommendations for the treatment of malignant pleural mesothelioma using the European Society of Medical Oncology levels of evidence and grades of recommendation adapted from the Infectious Diseases Society of America
| Surgery | Chemotherapy | Radiotherapy |
| For palliation of pleural effusions when patients cannot benefit from chest tube drainage or chemical pleurodesis or when these are not successful (II, A) | The anti-folate/platinum doublet is the only approved standard of care for the first- and second-line treatment of unresectable mesothelioma (I, A); If available, bevacizumab, could be added to the standard treatment in selected patients (II, B) | For palliation of pain related to tumor growth radiotherapy can be considered (II, A) |
| To obtain diagnostic samples of tumor tissue and to stage the patient (II, A) | Maintenance therapy (switch or continuation) has not yet improved overall survival and patients should be included in these studies (II, A) | The use of radiotherapy to prevent growth in drainage tracts is not proved to be useful (III, A) |
| To be part of a multimodality treatment, preferably as part of a study (II, A) | Patients in good condition should be recommended to join studies in second line (II, A) | Radiotherapy can be given in an adjuvant setting after surgery or chemo-surgery to reduce the local failure rate. However, no evidence is available for its use as a standard treatment (II, A) |
| To perform a macroscopic complete resection by means of pleurectomy/decortication (III, C) | When postoperative radiotherapy is applied, strict constraints must be adhered to in order to avoid toxicity to neighboring organs, and special, tissue sparing, techniques should be used (II, A) |
Table 3 Eighth edition of the tumor, node, metastasis classification for mesothelioma
| T | Primary tumor | N | Regional lymph nodes |
| Tx | Primary tumor cannot be assessed | Nx | Regional lymph nodes cannot be assessed |
| T0 | No evidence of primary tumor | N0 | No regional lymphnodemetastases |
| T1 | Tumor limited to the ipsilateral parietal pleura with or without involvement of visceral pleuralmediastinal pleuradiaphragmatic pleura | N1 | Metastases in the ipsilateral bronchopulmonary, hilar or mediastinal (including the internal mammary, peridiaphragmatic, pericardial fat pad or intercostal lymph nodes) lymph node) |
| T2 | Tumor involving each of the ipsilateral pleural surfaces (parietal, mediastinal, diaphragmatic and visceral pleura) with at least one of the following features: Involvement of diaphragmatic muscle. Extension of tumor from visceral pleura into the underlying pulmonary parenchyma | N2 | Metastases in the contralateral mediastinal, ipsilateral or contralateral supraclavicular lymph nodes |
| T3 | Locally advanced but potentially resectable tumor. Tumor involving all of the ipsilateral pleural surfaces (parietal, mediastinal, diaphragmatic, visceral pleura) with at least one of the following features: Involvement of endothoracic fascia; Extension into the mediastinal fat; Non-transmural involvement of the pericardium; Solitary, completely resectable focus of Tumor extending into the soft tissues of the chest wall | M | Distant metastasis |
| T4 | Locally advanced technically unresectable tumor. Tumor involving all of the ipsilateral pleural surfaces (parietal, mediastinal, diaphragmatic and visceral pleura) with at least one of the following features: Diffuse extension or multifocal masses of tumor in the chest wall, with or without associated rib destruction; Direct transdiaphragmatic extension of tumor to peritoneum; Direct extension of tumor to the contralateral pleura; Direct extension of tumor to mediastinal organs; Tumor extending through to the internal surface of the pericardium with or without pericardial effusion, or tumor involving the myocardium | M0 | No distant metastasis |
| M1 | Distant metastasis present |
Table 4 Eighth edition of the tumor lymph nodes metastasis classification for mesothelioma
| T | N | M | |
| Stage IA | T1 | N0 | M0 |
| Stage IB | T2-T3 | N0 | M0 |
| Stage II | T1-T2 | N1 | M0 |
| Stage IIIA | T3 | N1 | M0 |
| Stage IIIB | T1-T3 | N2 | M0 |
| T4 | Any N | ||
| Stage IV | Any T | Any N | M1 |
Table 5 Dose constraints in organs at risk
| Organs at risk | Dose constraints |
| Lungs-GTV | V20 < 37%, Mean dose < 20 Gy |
| Contralateral lung-PTV | V20 < 20%, V5 < 17%, Mean dose < 8 Gy |
| Ipsilateral lung | V40 < 67%, Mean dose < 36 Gy |
| Heart defined as pericardial sac | Right mesothelioma V40 < 25%; Left mesothelioma V40 < 35% |
| Brachial plexus | Maximum dose < 65 Gy |
| Esophagus | V55 Gy < 30%; Mean dose < 34 Gy |
| Stomach minus including PTV | Mean dose < 30 Gy |
| Bowel | Maximum dose < maximum PTV < 55 Gy; D5 cc < 50 Gy |
| Spinal cord | Maximum dose < 50 Gy |
| Liver minus GTV | V30 < 45%; Mean dose < 30 Gy |
| Kidneys evaluated separately | V18 < 33% (or V18 < 50%, if cannot be achieved at ≤ 33%) |
| Ipsilateral kidney; Contralateral kidney | V25 < 40%; V10 < 10% |
Table 6 Dose constraints in organs at risk in mesothelioma radiotherapy treatment
| Structure | Heart | Contralateral lung | Ipsilateral lung | Esophagus | Spinal cord |
| Dose constraints | V40: 0 (< 35%) | V20: 1.5 (< 20%); Mean dose 7 Gy (< 8) | V40: 57 (< 67%); Mean dose: 35 Gy (< 36 Gy) | V55: 0 (< 30%); Mean dose 26 (< 34 Gy) | Maximum dose: 43.7 (< 50 Gy) |
- Citation: Luna J, Bobo A, Cabrera-Rodriguez JJ, Pagola M, Martín-Martín M, Ruiz MÁG, Montijano M, Rodríguez A, Pelari-Mici L, Corbacho A, Moreno M, Couñago F. GOECP/SEOR clinical guidelines on radiotherapy for malignant pleural mesothelioma. World J Clin Oncol 2021; 12(8): 581-608
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/2218-4333/full/v12/i8/581.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.5306/wjco.v12.i8.581
