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Grand RoundsWeekly Evidence Brief

Radiation Oncology

Edition

30-Second Takeaway

  • Early consolidative RT with first-line chemo-immunotherapy improves survival in ES-SCLC without major added toxicity.
  • Proton and photon RT yield similar long-term NSCLC outcomes; any proton survival benefit appears early and hypothesis-generating.
  • PD-1 blockade with cisplatin-based CRT improves disease control in LANPC without excess severe toxicity; OS impact remains uncertain.

Week ending February 14, 2026

Integrating RT, Immunotherapy, and Technique Choices Across Thoracic, GU, and Head & Neck Oncology

Early RT with First-Line Chemo-Immunotherapy Improves Outcomes in ES-SCLC

FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGYFeb 9, 2026

In this five-center cohort of 771 ES-SCLC patients, adding early radiotherapy to first-line chemo-immunotherapy improved PFS and OS versus no RT (p<0.001). Benefits were seen with both thoracic and extrathoracic RT and persisted after propensity score matching, suggesting a robust association. Within thoracic RT, consolidative treatment yielded better PFS and OS than fully concurrent RT with systemic therapy. Survival did not differ between patients receiving higher versus lower biologically effective doses around 60 Gy and 39 Gy.

Protons vs Photons for NSCLC: Comparable Long-Term Control, Early Survival Signal

CANCERSFeb 13, 2026

This systematic review and meta-analysis pooled seven comparative studies including 244,604 NSCLC patients treated with proton or photon radiotherapy. Protons did not significantly improve OS, PFS, or local PFS versus photons overall (OS HR 0.91; PFS HR 1.09; LPFS HR 0.89). Stage I and stage I–II subgroup analyses similarly showed no clear survival advantage for protons. Exploratory fixed-time analysis suggested improved 1-year survival with protons (OR 0.60), but no benefit at 3 or 5 years.

Salvage Focal Therapy vs Radical Prostatectomy After Radiorecurrent Disease

JAMA ONCOLOGYFeb 12, 2026

This international multicenter cohort compared salvage focal therapy using HIFU or cryotherapy with salvage radical prostatectomy for localized radiorecurrent prostate cancer. Among 923 eligible patients, 419 underwent salvage focal therapy and 504 underwent salvage prostatectomy across multiple registries. Ten-year cancer-specific survival was high in both groups, 92% after salvage focal therapy and 99% after salvage prostatectomy, without a statistically significant difference. Overall survival and perioperative as well as major complication rates were also evaluated to inform risk–benefit counseling.

PD-1 Blockade Plus CRT Improves Disease Control in Locally Advanced NPC

THERAPEUTIC ADVANCES IN MEDICAL ONCOLOGYFeb 11, 2026

This meta-analysis combined three phase III randomized trials totaling 1237 patients with previously untreated locoregionally advanced nasopharyngeal carcinoma. Adding PD-1 inhibitors to definitive chemoradiotherapy significantly improved event- or failure-free survival (HR 0.66) and distant metastasis-free survival (HR 0.61). Locoregional relapse-free survival showed a nonsignificant trend overall, with clearer benefit in cisplatin-based regimens (HR 0.53). Overall survival data were immature, with no significant difference yet observed (HR 0.94).

References

Numbered in order of appearance. Click any reference to view details.

Additional Reads

Optional additional studies from this edition.

Edition context

Clinical signal

  • RT–immunotherapy combinations are altering standards in ES-SCLC, LANPC, and early NSCLC, though durable OS data are still limited.
  • Technical and systemic choices (protons vs photons, lobaplatin vs cisplatin, ERB vs no ERB) significantly influence toxicity with similar disease control.
  • Salvage options for radiorecurrent prostate cancer require nuanced counseling, balancing marginal cancer-specific differences against differing morbidity profiles.