2023
DOI: 10.1177/17588359231156387
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Treatment strategies based on different oligoprogressive patterns after immunotherapy failure in metastatic NSCLC

Abstract: Background: Oligoprogressive disease is recognized as the overall umbrella term; however, a small number of progressions on imaging can represent different clinical scenarios. This study aims to explore the optimal treatment strategy after immunotherapy (IO) resistance in advanced non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC), especially in personalized therapies for patients with different oligoprogressive patterns. Methods: Based on European Society for Radiotherapy and Oncology/European Organization for Research and T… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
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“…Better prognosis was observed on patients with oligometastases, a clinical state between locally confined and systemic metastasized disease, which was reported to be potentially curative from positive local treatment like SBRT [10] . And according to another retrospective analysis of our institution, primary lesion (59.1 %) was found to be the most common progression site after first-line immunotherapy [23] , which also provides a rationale for local consolidative treatment. Besides that, irradiation of all disease sites contributed to superior PFS and OS comparing to irradiation of limited sites, supporting the idea that irradiating multiple/all lesions increases the chance of successfully priming an antitumor immune response.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…Better prognosis was observed on patients with oligometastases, a clinical state between locally confined and systemic metastasized disease, which was reported to be potentially curative from positive local treatment like SBRT [10] . And according to another retrospective analysis of our institution, primary lesion (59.1 %) was found to be the most common progression site after first-line immunotherapy [23] , which also provides a rationale for local consolidative treatment. Besides that, irradiation of all disease sites contributed to superior PFS and OS comparing to irradiation of limited sites, supporting the idea that irradiating multiple/all lesions increases the chance of successfully priming an antitumor immune response.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 93%