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Grand RoundsWeekly Evidence Brief

Radiation Oncology

Edition

30-Second Takeaway

  • Radiotherapy details are often missing in systemic therapy trials and should be prospectively specified.
  • Single‑fraction 19 Gy urethra‑sparing SBRT achieved high early biochemical control with low moderate GI/GU toxicity.

Week ending June 20, 2026

Selected 2026 radiation oncology evidence briefs for practice

Off‑protocol radiotherapy is underreported and unspecified in metastatic NSCLC trials

CLINICAL LUNG CANCERJun 19, 2026

In a review of 79 prospective systemic therapy trials for metastatic NSCLC, 93.7% allowed radiation before enrollment and 8.9% prohibited off‑protocol radiation. Only 21.5% required a drug washout around radiation, and no trial specified allowable dose, fractionation, technique, or organ‑at‑risk constraints for off‑protocol radiotherapy. Pre‑enrollment radiation was reported in 32.9% of trials and off‑protocol radiation use was never reported or adjusted for in outcomes. The authors conclude that inconsistent reporting and lack of radiotherapy parameters threaten trial interpretability.

Adjuvant breast radiotherapy not linked to increased skin cancer in large Korean cohort

BRITISH JOURNAL OF CANCERJun 13, 2026

In a nationwide cohort of 37,957 breast cancer patients with 1:1 propensity matching (n=19,856), skin cancer incidence was similar: 0.97% with RT versus 1.02% without RT (p=0.720). RT was not significantly associated with malignant melanoma or non‑melanoma skin cancer on multivariable analysis. Older age, presence of moles, premalignant skin lesions, and lymphedema predicted higher skin cancer risk. Findings apply mainly to an Asian population and do not indicate routine skin‑cancer surveillance changes solely due to adjuvant RT.

Single‑fraction 19‑Gy urethra‑sparing SBRT yields high 3‑year biochemical control

JAMA ONCOLOGYJun 18, 2026

In this multicenter nonrandomized phase 1/2 trial of 45 men with low‑ or intermediate‑risk prostate cancer, a single 19‑Gy urethra‑sparing SBRT achieved a 3‑year bRFS of 92.9% (95% CI, 85.4%–100%). Grade 2 GU and GI adverse events at 3 years were low (9.8% and 4.9%, respectively), with one grade‑3 proctitis reported. Erectile dysfunction (grade ≥2) increased from 21.4% at baseline to 38.4% at 3 years, and modest declines in patient‑reported GU and sexual QOL were observed. Authors note longer follow‑up is required before adopting single‑fraction SBRT outside trial settings.

References

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

Additional Reads

Optional additional studies from this edition.

Edition context

Clinical signal

  • When referring patients to systemic trials, verify protocol radiation allowances and required washout periods.
  • Discuss fertility risks by cancer type; pelvic radiotherapy and alkylating agents carry highest gonadal risk.
  • In localized prostate cancer, consider single‑fraction SBRT only within protocols or with clear informed consent.