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ARCHIVED Proton Beam Therapy 2021-03-14 to 2022-03-12


CLINICAL APPROPRIATENESS GUIDELINES


RADIATION ONCOLOGY

Appropriate Use Criteria: Proton Beam Therapy

EFFECTIVE MARCH 14, 2021

ARCHIVED MARCH 13, 2022

This document has been archived because it has outdated information. It is for historical information only and should not be consulted for clinical use. Current versions of guidelines are available on the Carelon Medical Benefits Management website here.

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Table of Contents

CLINICAL APPROPRIATENESS GUIDELINES

Appropriate Use Criteria: Proton Beam Therapy

Table of Contents

Description and Application of the Guidelines

General Clinical Guideline

Proton Beam Therapy

General Information

Proton Beam Therapy Considerations

Clinical Indications

Exclusions

Codes

References

History

Description and Application of the Guidelines


The Carelon Clinical Appropriateness Guidelines (hereinafter “the Carelon Clinical Appropriateness Guidelines” or the “Guidelines”) are designed to assist providers in making the most appropriate treatment decision for a specific clinical condition for an individual. As used by Carelon, the Guidelines establish objective and evidence-based criteria for medical necessity determinations where possible. In the process, multiple functions are accomplished:

  • To establish criteria for when services are medically necessary
  • To assist the practitioner as an educational tool
  • To encourage standardization of medical practice patterns
  • To curtail the performance of inappropriate and/or duplicate services
  • To advocate for patient safety concerns
  • To enhance the quality of health care
  • To promote the most efficient and cost-effective use of services


The Carelon guideline development process complies with applicable accreditation standards, including the requirement that the Guidelines be developed with involvement from appropriate providers with current clinical expertise relevant to the Guidelines under review and be based on the most up-to-date clinical principles and best practices. Relevant citations are included in the References section attached to each Guideline. Carelon reviews all of its Guidelines at least annually.


Carelon makes its Guidelines publicly available on its website twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week. Copies of the Carelon Clinical Appropriateness Guidelines are also available upon oral or written request. Although the Guidelines are publicly-available, Carelon considers the Guidelines to be important, proprietary information of Carelon, which cannot be sold, assigned, leased, licensed, reproduced or distributed without the written consent of Carelon.


Carelon applies objective and evidence-based criteria, and takes individual circumstances and the local delivery system into account when determining the medical appropriateness of health care services. The Carelon Guidelines are just guidelines for the provision of specialty health services. These criteria are designed to guide both providers and reviewers to the most appropriate services based on a patient’s unique circumstances. In all cases, clinical judgment consistent with the standards of good medical practice should be used when applying the Guidelines. Guideline determinations are made based on the information provided at the time of the request. It is expected that medical necessity decisions may change as new information is provided or based on unique aspects of the patient’s condition. The treating clinician has final authority and responsibility for treatment decisions regarding the care of the patient and for justifying and demonstrating the existence of medical necessity for the requested service. The Guidelines are not a substitute for the experience and judgment of a physician or other health care professionals. Any clinician seeking to apply or consult the Guidelines is expected to use independent medical judgment in the context of individual clinical circumstances to determine any patient’s care or treatment.


The Guidelines do not address coverage, benefit or other plan specific issues. Applicable federal and state coverage mandates take precedence over these clinical guidelines. If requested by a health plan, Carelon will review requests based on health plan medical policy/guidelines in lieu of the Carelon Guidelines.


The Guidelines may also be used by the health plan or by Carelon for purposes of provider education, or to review the medical necessity of services by any provider who has been notified of the need for medical necessity review, due to billing practices or claims that are not consistent with other providers in terms of frequency or some other manner.

General Clinical Guideline

Clinical Appropriateness Framework


Critical to any finding of clinical appropriateness under the guidelines for a specific diagnostic or therapeutic intervention are the following elements:

  • Prior to any intervention, it is essential that the clinician confirm the diagnosis or establish its pretest likelihood based on a complete evaluation of the patient. This includes a history and physical examination and, where applicable, a review of relevant laboratory studies, diagnostic testing, and response to prior therapeutic intervention.
  • The anticipated benefit of the recommended intervention should outweigh any potential harms that may result (net benefit).
  • Current literature and/or standards of medical practice should support that the recommended intervention offers the greatest net benefit among competing alternatives.
  • Based on the clinical evaluation, current literature, and standards of medical practice, there exists a reasonable likelihood that the intervention will change management and/or lead to an improved outcome for the patient.


If these elements are not established with respect to a given request, the determination of appropriateness will most likely require a peer-to-peer conversation to understand the individual and unique facts that would supersede the requirements set forth above. During the peer-to-peer conversation, factors such as patient acuity and setting of service may also be taken into account.

Simultaneous Ordering of Multiple Diagnostic or Therapeutic Interventions


Requests for multiple diagnostic or therapeutic interventions at the same time will often require a peer-to-peer conversation to understand the individual circumstances that support the medical necessity of performing all interventions simultaneously. This is based on the fact that appropriateness of additional intervention is often dependent on the outcome of the initial intervention.


Additionally, either of the following may apply:

  • Current literature and/or standards of medical practice support that one of the requested diagnostic or therapeutic interventions is more appropriate in the clinical situation presented; or
  • One of the diagnostic or therapeutic interventions requested is more likely to improve patient outcomes based on current literature and/or standards of medical practice.

Repeat Diagnostic Intervention


In general, repeated testing of the same anatomic location for the same indication should be limited to evaluation following an intervention, or when there is a change in clinical status such that additional testing is required to determine next steps in management. At times, it may be necessary to repeat a test using different techniques or protocols to clarify a finding or result of the original study.


Repeated testing for the same indication using the same or similar technology may be subject to additional review or require peer-to-peer conversation in the following scenarios:

  • Repeated diagnostic testing at the same facility due to technical issues
  • Repeated diagnostic testing requested at a different facility due to provider preference or quality concerns
  • Repeated diagnostic testing of the same anatomic area based on persistent symptoms with no clinical change, treatment, or intervention since the previous study
  • Repeated diagnostic testing of the same anatomic area by different providers for the same member over a short period of time

Repeat Therapeutic Intervention


In general, repeated therapeutic intervention in the same anatomic area is considered appropriate when the prior intervention proved effective or beneficial and the expected duration of relief has lapsed. A repeat intervention requested prior to the expected duration of relief is not appropriate unless it can be confirmed that the prior intervention was never administered.

Proton Beam Therapy

General Information

Definitions

Statistical terminology

  • Confidence interval (CI) describes the amount of uncertainty associated with a sampling method. Confidence intervals are usually reported to help explain how reliable, or precise, a result is.
  • Hazard ratio (HR) is a measure of how often a particular event happens in one group compared to how often it happens in another group, over time. In cancer research, hazard ratios are often used in clinical trials to measure survival at any point in time in a group of patients who have been given a specific treatment compared to a control group given another treatment or a placebo. A hazard ratio of one means that there is no difference in survival between the two groups. A hazard ratio of greater than one or less than one means that survival was better in one of the groups.
  • Odds ratio (OR) is a measure of the odds of an event happening in one group compared to the odds of the same event happening in another group. In cancer research, odds ratios are most often used in case-control (backward looking) studies to find out if being exposed to a certain substance or other factor increases the risk of cancer. For example, researchers may study a group of individuals with cancer (cases) and another group without cancer (controls) to see how many people in each group were exposed to a certain substance or factor. They calculate the odds of exposure in both groups and then compare the odds. An odds ratio of one means that both groups had the same odds of exposure and, therefore, the exposure probably does not increase the risk of cancer. An odds ratio of greater than one means that the exposure may increase the risk of cancer, and an odds ratio of less than one means that the exposure may reduce the risk of cancer. Also called relative odds.
  • Overall survival (OS) is the length of time from either the date of diagnosis or the start of treatment for a disease, such as cancer, that patients diagnosed with the disease are still alive. In a clinical trial, measuring the overall survival is one way to see how well a new treatment works.
  • Overall survival rate is the percentage of people in a study or treatment group who are still alive for a certain period of time after they were diagnosed with or started treatment for a disease, such as cancer. The overall survival rate is often stated as a five-year survival rate, which is the percentage of people in a study or treatment group who are alive five years after their diagnosis or the start of treatment. Also called survival rate.
  • Progression-free survival (PFS) is the length of time during and after the treatment of a disease, such as cancer, that a patient lives with the disease but it does not get worse. In a clinical trial, measuring the progression-free survival is one way to see how well a new treatment works.
  • Relative risk (RR) is a measure of the risk of a certain event happening in one group compared to the risk of the same event happening in another group. In cancer research, relative risk is used in prospective (forward looking) studies, such as cohort studies and clinical trials. A relative risk of one means there is no difference between two groups in terms of their risk of cancer, based on whether or not they were exposed to a certain substance or factor, or how they responded to two treatments being compared. A relative risk of greater than one or of less than one usually means that being exposed to a certain substance or factor either increases (relative risk greater than one) or decreases (relative risk less than one) the risk of cancer, or that the treatments being compared do not have the same effects. Also called risk ratio.
  • Response rate is the percentage of patients whose cancer shrinks or disappears after treatment.

Proton Beam Therapy Considerations


Proton beam radiation therapy, also known as proton beam therapy (PBT), is a type of external radiation treatment. Using a stereotactic planning and delivery system, positively charged subatomic particles (protons) are targeted to a specific tissue mass. Protons behave differently than x-rays or photons in that they have a low energy deposition rate as they enter the body, followed by a steep increased energy deposition when they reach their target. Although there is essentially no energy deposited beyond the target, there is lateral scatter and some uncertainty about their physical range in tissue. Compared to x-ray treatment, surrounding healthy tissue generally receives less radiation. Despite the proliferation of proton centers in recent years, there is a lack of high-quality evidence demonstrating improved outcomes vs other forms of precision radiation therapy. Proton beam therapy remains an area of active clinical investigation, and recommendations for its use continue to evolve.


Proton beam therapy may be appropriate in circumstances where intensity modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) or stereotactic would potentially damage critical structures, particularly in patients with a history of prior irradiation. Proton beam therapy is also appropriate for pediatric patients because even low doses of scattered radiation in this population can affect growth and development and increase the risk of secondary malignancies later in life. This technique of radiation delivery is being actively studied in other clinical scenarios, and its role in these situations in many cases remains unclear. In situations where there is a lack of high-quality evidence comparing proton outcomes with photon-based therapies, proton therapy will be considered not medically necessary. In situations where proton therapy is appropriate, PBT should be administered as monotherapy.

Breast Cancer


There are no randomized trials of PBT for breast cancer. A recent systematic review discussed nine original investigations of PBT for both whole breast treatment and accelerated partial breast irradiation (APBI). Skin toxicity and esophagitis were comparable to photon therapy. None of the outcomes reported were improved with PBT. There is a randomized trial comparing PBT to photon therapy underway.


Proton beam therapy is considered not medically necessary for the treatment of breast cancer.

Central Nervous System Lesions


Radiation therapy is commonly used to treat central nervous system (CNS) tumors and other intracranial lesions such as arteriovenous malformations (AVM). Results of proton therapy have been reported for a variety of CNS lesions. In the treatment of gliomas, dose escalation to 68.2 centigray equivalent (CGE) did not improve outcomes in a phase I/II trial of protons in grade 2-3 astrocytoma. In another study, dose escalation to 90 CGE slightly increased median survival, but all patients had marginal failure just beyond the high-dose area and necrosis was seen in one third of patients. A more recent Japanese phase I/II study boosted glioblastomas to 96.6 CGE and reported a handful of long-term survivors, all of whom have developed necrosis. Benign tumors including meningiomas, acoustic neuromas and pituitary adenomas have also been treated with protons. Results of treatment are similar to those seen with non-proton techniques such as IMRT and stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS). A recent review of PBT to treat CNS lesions by Combs concluded that “no clinical data have shown superiority over advanced photon therapy.”


Use of PBT for CNS lesions is only medically necessary for specific cases where adjacent critical structures cannot be adequately spared with IMRT or SRS.

Chordoma and Chondrosarcoma


Chordomas and chondrosarcomas are rare bone and soft tissue tumors which occur along the spinal axis. The mainstay of treatment is surgery, but in many cases only biopsy or piecemeal resection is possible. Postoperative radiotherapy has been shown to improve outcomes. In the past, tumors occurring in the base of skull area were unable to be treated to high doses with conventional therapy due to the risk of damaging normal tissues. Protons were used to safely treat chordomas in this location with good results. In the most comprehensive review published to date, seven studies of proton therapy were compared to ten studies of conventional radiotherapy and reported improved local control and survival with protons compared to x-rays. The average five-year local control with protons was 69% vs only 36% with photons. The five-year survival rate was 80% with PBT vs 54% with x-rays. Chordomas and chrondrosarcoma of the spine are similarly difficult to treat given that doses above 70 Gy are given to areas in close proximity to the spinal cord and viscera. A recent prospective phase II trial of protons in this setting showed an impressive 94% five-year local control for primary tumors with acceptable late morbidity.


Results with modern radiotherapy techniques like IMRT and radiosurgery are improved compared to conventional radiotherapy, but given the excellent long-term results seen with protons, they are considered medically necessary for the treatment of base of skull and sacral chordomas and chondrosarcomas.

Head and Neck Cancer


Although several trials are underway, there are no published randomized studies comparing proton therapy to IMRT in the treatment of head and neck cancers. In 2010, the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) conducted a systematic review of radiation modalities used in the treatment of head and neck malignancies including 2D radiation, 3D conformal radiation, IMRT, and PBT. They concluded that there was insufficient evidence comparing PBT to other modalities. This report was updated in 2014 with the same conclusion.


A 2016 single institution report retrospectively compared intensity modulated proton therapy (IMPT) to IMRT in the treatment of oropharyngeal cancer. There was no difference in progression-free survival between the modalities. IMRT-treated patients were more likely to have a gastrostomy tube (G-tube) placed than proton-treated patients, but this was not statistically significant. Outcomes meeting statistical significance were patient reported xerostomia at three months, weight loss greater than 20%, and G-tube presence one year after treatment. The authors concluded that prospective multicenter randomized trials are needed to validate these findings.


This hypothesis-generating report forms the basis for an NCI-sponsored, phase II/III, randomized clinical trial comparing IMRT and PBT in the treatment of oropharynx cancer (NCT01893307). In a recent review, Leeman et al. concluded that “ultimately, such trials will help establish the clinical usefulness of proton beam therapy and will be necessary to provide sufficient evidence regarding toxicity benefits to support wider adoption.”


A recent publication describes the final selection of primary and secondary endpoints to be used for NCT01893307 as this study transitions from phase II to phase III. NRG Oncology, a non-profit research organization formed to conduct clinical research in oncology and to broadly disseminate study results to inform clinical decision-making and health policy, was brought in as a partner and expressed concerns about the proposed endpoints of the study. The initial primary endpoint of physician scored, late onset, grade ≥3 toxicity was scrapped due to a perceived lack of objectivity in physician ratings using the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE) and insufficient sensitivity to account for other forms of toxicity. The study has now been redesigned as a non-inferiority trial using progression-free survival as the primary endpoint and using an expanded group of toxicity measurements as secondary endpoints.


A systematic review and meta-analysis of charged particle therapy vs x-ray based therapy for treatment of paranasal sinus and nasal cancers was published by Patel et al. There were no head-to-head comparison trials, so their analysis consisted of 41 observational studies. Of these, there were 13 reports for charged particle therapy and 30 cohorts treated with photons. In the meta-analysis of these reports, treatment with charged particle therapy was associated with higher survival at five years. Neurologic toxicity was significantly higher in the charged particle group as well. The studies reviewed included a very heterogeneous group. For photon therapy, treatment techniques included 2D, 3D, IMRT, and brachytherapy. The charged particle cohorts included both protons and carbon ions with most patients being treated with passively scattered protons. A similar proportion of patients in both groups had advanced disease but the photon-treated patients were more likely to have a high-risk histology. The heterogeneity of both the patient populations and treatment techniques as well as the inclusion of inadequate treatment techniques such as 2D and 3D conformal radiotherapy in the photon group make it impossible to draw meaningful conclusions for the entire group. Proton beam therapy may be appropriate to treat certain locally advanced sinonasal cancers involving the base of skull when adjacent critical structures are unable to be adequately spared with IMRT.


Proton beam therapy is considered medically necessary to treat locally advanced sinonasal cancers involving the base of skull. Proton beam therapy is not medically necessary for the treatment of other head and neck cancers.

Hepatocellular Cancer


Hepatocellular carcinomas (HCC) are aggressive primary malignancies of the liver. All patients should be evaluated for potentially curative therapies including resection, transplantation and ablative treatment. Ablative therapies include radiofrequency ablation, microwave therapy, and alcohol injection. Radiation therapy is considered for patients who are not candidates for resection. There is growing evidence for the use of stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT). Charged particle therapy such as proton therapy has also been used in the treatment of hepatocellular carcinoma.


There are no randomized trials comparing PBT to other forms of external radiation. A systematic review and meta-analysis comparing charged particle therapy to conventional radiation and SBRT has been reported. Overall survival, progression-free survival, and local control were equivalent for particle therapy and SBRT. Both charged particle therapy and SBRT were superior to conventional radiation.


A single institution retrospective study compared ablative photon vs proton therapy in patients with unresectable hepatocellular carcinoma. The majority of the proton beam patients were treated as part of a phase II single arm clinical trial (NCT 00976898). The primary endpoint was overall survival. Proton therapy was associated with an improved overall survival of 31 months vs 14 months with photons. The proton-treated patients had a significantly lower risk of nonclassic radiation induced liver disease (RILD) (OR 0.26, P = .03) and development of RILD at 3 months was significantly associated with worse overall survival. There was no difference in local failure between the two treatment suggesting that the improved survival is related to the decrease in post-treatment liver decompensation.


Proton therapy has been compared to transarterial chemoembolization (TACE) for HCC in a randomized trial. A total of 69 subjects were reported. The primary endpoint was progression-free survival. There was a trend toward improved progression-free survival (48% vs 31%; P = .06) favoring protons but no significant difference in overall survival with a median overall survival of 30 months. Total days of hospitalization within 30 days of treatment was 166 days for the 36 TACE patients and 24 days for the proton patients (P < .001).


Proton beam therapy is considered medically necessary for the treatment of unresectable HCC with curative intent when there is no evidence of metastatic disease.

Other Gastrointestinal Cancers


There have been few reports of PBT to treat esophageal and gastroesophageal junction tumors. There are no prospective randomized trials. Wang et al. published a retrospective report of complications after trimodality therapy looking at IMRT and PBT compared to 3D conformal radiation. A total of 444 patients were reported. Both IMRT and PBT were associated with reduced risk of complications compared to 3D conformal radiation. No direct comparison of IMRT vs PBT was performed. Several phase II trials are underway but there is insufficient evidence to draw conclusions on how PBT compares to photon based therapy for esophageal cancer.


There are no moderate or high-quality studies comparing PBT to 3D conformal radiotherapy or IMRT for gastric or pancreatic cancer.


Proton beam therapy is considered not medically necessary for the treatment of esophageal, gastric or pancreatic cancer.

Lung Cancer


Radiotherapy is used as a primary treatment for early stage non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), particularly when surgical resection is not an option. In the treatment of stage I medically inoperable NSCLC, a meta-analysis of studies of PBT and SBRT has been reported. Two-year survival rates for stage I NSCLC treated with SBRT were 70% vs 61% for PBT. The five-year survival rates were similar. Both SBRT and proton therapy were significantly better than conventional radiotherapy for stage I disease. Proton beam therapy is considered not medically necessary for small cell lung cancer and stage I NSCLC.


Radiation therapy, usually delivered with concurrent chemotherapy, is the standard of care for the treatment of unresectable stage III NSCLC. In specific cases, IMRT is needed to achieve adequate sparing of organs at risk such as the normal lung. Significant lung and esophageal toxicity are common and these toxicities have hampered attempts at dose escalation.


Proton beam therapy has been used for NSCLC in an attempt to allow dose escalation while minimizing lung and esophageal toxicity. Several institutions have reported on their experience. A systematic review by Widesott examined 17 studies. There were no prospective reports. Nine single institution studies reported on a total of 214 patients, most with stage I or II disease. Several studies focused on dose distributions and technical issues associated with PBT. They concluded that it was impossible to draw definitive conclusions about the superiority of PBT for NSCLC. A subsequent phase II trial by Chang reported encouraging results in unresectable stage III disease. A prospective randomized trial comparing PBT with photon therapy was completed at MD Anderson Cancer Center, and final results were published in 2018. A total of 255 patients were enrolled and 149 of these were randomized. Proton therapy did not improve local control nor did it improve survival compared to IMRT. The rate of pneumonitis was higher in the proton therapy arm (11%) vs the IMRT arm (7%). This study reinforces the importance of level 1 evidence in the study of proton therapy. NRG/RTOG protocol 1308 is a randomized trial of PBT vs IMRT both with concurrent platinum based chemotherapy in stage II-IIIB non-small cell lung cancer which should provide additional data on how proton therapy compares to standard treatment.


ASTRO has published a clinical practice guideline on the use of radiation therapy for small cell lung cancer which states:

However, unlike nonsmall cell lung cancer (NSCLC), there are limited data on advanced RT techniques in SCLC treatment. Proton therapy could potentially further decrease normal tissue toxicities, but there are limited prospective data on its role in SCLC treatment. Generation of evidence is encouraged through treatment of patients in prospective clinical trials or multi-institutional registries.

There are limited data on the role of postoperative RT for SCLC, so the recommendation on indications for RT in this setting is based on NSCLC.


Proton beam therapy is considered not medically necessary in the treatment of lung cancer.

Lymphoma


Data on PBT for treatment for lymphoma are limited. A recent review examined the use of consolidative PBT after chemotherapy for patients with Hodgkin lymphoma. A total of 138 patients enrolled on tracking protocols or registry studies were reviewed. Forty-two percent of the patients were pediatric and received a median dose of 21 Gy equivalent. Adult patients received a median dose of 30.6 Gy equivalent. With a median follow-up of 32 months, three-year relapse-free survival was 92%. The authors concluded that early survival rates are similar to photon based therapy and the continued follow-up to assess for late effects is needed.


Data on proton therapy for non-Hodgkin lymphoma are limited. A small retrospective cohort has been reported. Eleven patients were treated between 2008 and 2014. Follow-up was 38 months. Two-year local control was 91%. Toxicities were grade 2 or less. The study concluded that longer-term follow-up and more patients were needed to confirm their findings.


Proton beam therapy is considered not medically necessary for the treatment of Hodgkin lymphoma and non-Hodgkin lymphoma.

Ocular (Uveal) Melanoma


Curative treatment for ocular melanoma with preservation of vision can be achieved with either plaque brachytherapy or with PBT. A systematic review and meta-analysis of charged particle radiation therapy for uveal melanoma demonstrated that charged particle therapy (most commonly PBT) resulted in a lower local recurrence rate than plaque brachytherapy. Proton beam therapy also showed better outcomes in terms of retinopathy and cataract formation. Enucleation and survival were similar with PBT and brachytherapy.


Boker et al. recently compared neoadjuvant proton therapy with adjuvant ruthenium brachytherapy together with transscleral resection for large uveal melanomas. The five-year recurrence rate was 9% for proton-treated patients vs 27.5% in the ruthenium brachytherapy-treated cohort. Metastatic rates were similar as was the risk of enucleation.


Proton therapy is considered medically necessary for the treatment of uveal melanoma.

Prostate Cancer


Historically, PBT was used as a boost technique for prostate cancer due to the ability to deliver a higher dose than could be safely delivered with 2D and 3D techniques. Single institution reports of PBT dose escalation showed favorable disease-free survival and acceptable toxicity in this era. Over the past two decades, there have been significant improvements in technology allowing similar dose escalation to be achieved with IMRT.


The only randomized trial of PBT compared low dose proton boost (19.8 CGE) with high dose proton boost (28.8 CGE) after a dose of 50.4 Gy to the pelvis with x-rays. In that study, the higher dose proton boost improved biochemical recurrence-free survival but also increased the frequency of acute gastrointestinal (GI) and genitourinary (GU) toxicity. There were no significant differences in late toxicity. The study did not evaluate whether proton therapy is more efficacious or less toxic than other forms of conformal radiation.


Although there are no reports from randomized trials comparing proton therapy with IMRT and 3D conformal radiation, there have been retrospective comparative studies. In a large-scale review of outcomes based on Medicare claims data, 684 patients treated with PBT were compared with 9,437 men treated with IMRT. Follow-up was 46 to 50 months and the results were propensity score matched to account for baseline characteristics. Rates of urinary incontinence, other urinary morbidity and sexual dysfunction were similar for PBT and IMRT. Compared to IMRT, patients treated with PBT had a higher rate of GI morbidity (17.8 vs 12.2 per 100 person-years). In terms of disease control, IMRT was shown to be better than conformal therapy. Proton therapy did not provide additional benefit over IMRT.


Patient-reported outcomes for 3D conformal radiotherapy, IMRT and PBT have also been reported. Using validated quality of life (QOL) instruments, a 2013 study looked at scores in the immediate post-treatment period and at 12- and 24-month follow-up visits. In the immediate post-treatment interval, bowel QOL decreased for both 3D and IMRT treated patients but not the PBT group. At 12 and 24 months, all three groups showed decreased bowel/rectal QOL. With regard to urinary toxicity, IMRT treated patients showed decreased GU QOL in the immediate period but this had disappeared by 12 months. At 12 months, the PBT cohort demonstrated decreased urinary QOL while 3D and IMRT patients had returned to baseline. No meaningful urinary QOL changes were seen in any group at 24 months. Although timing of toxicity varied between cohorts, patients reported similar long-term QOL decrements irrespective of modality.


There is significant consensus among radiation oncologists that there is a lack of comparative effectiveness research on PBT for prostate cancer. Multiple evidence-based reviews of this topic have concluded that no clear evidence supports a benefit of proton therapy over IMRT in terms of efficacy or long-term toxicity. These include reports from the AHRQ, Hayes, the American Urologic Association, the American College of Radiology, and the ASTRO Subcommittee on Emerging Technology. In their 2017 update of the model policy on PBT, ASTRO maintains:


“In the treatment of prostate cancer, the use of PBT is evolving as the comparative efficacy evidence is still being developed. In order for an informed consensus on the role of PBT for prostate cancer to be reached, it is essential to collect further data, especially to understand how the effectiveness of proton therapy compares to other radiation modalities such as IMRT and brachytherapy. There is a need for more well-designed registries and studies with sizable comparator cohorts to help accelerate data collection. Proton beam therapy for primary treatment of prostate cancer should only be performed within the context of a prospective clinical trial or registry.”


The body of evidence on PBT for prostate cancer largely consists of retrospective studies performed at tertiary centers. The evidence quality is low and there are insufficient data to determine how PBT compares to standard of care photon-based therapies, which are able to achieve excellent outcomes with low toxicity.


Proton beam therapy is considered not medically necessary for the treatment of prostate cancer.

Risk Reduction


There have been multiple publications theorizing a reduced risk of second malignancies with the use of proton therapy. These generally compare dosimetric data from proton plans compared to IMRT plans and use mathematical modeling to predict the cancer risk. These models are largely untested and there is a dearth of actual data reporting on the risk posed by scattered radiation, especially in adults.


Several studies have looked at the actual risk of second malignancy following radiotherapy and have compared this to patients who have not been irradiated. Zelefsky reported on the 10-year risk of second cancer among men with prostate cancer treated with radical prostatectomy, brachytherapy, and external beam radiotherapy. The risk of developing bladder or colorectal cancer was 3% for radical prostatectomy, 2% for brachytherapy, and 4% for external beam radiotherapy at 10 years (P = .29). For all second cancers, there was a slightly higher risk in the irradiated patients but on multivariate analysis this difference was found to be attributable to age and smoking history rather than treatment received. Another report examined the risk of second cancers after radiotherapy in three randomized trials and compared this to patients randomized to no radiotherapy. A total of 2,554 patients were analyzed who had participated in the TME trial for rectal cancer, the PORTEC-1 and PORTEC-2 trials in endometrial cancer. Although all patients in these trials were at somewhat higher risk of second malignancy than the general population, the patients who received radiotherapy had no higher probability of developing second cancers than those treated with surgery alone.


Chung et al. reported on the incidence of second malignancy in 558 patients treated with proton therapy at the Harvard Cyclotron facility and compared this to matched controls in the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) database. The incidence of second cancers in the proton group was approximately 7 per 1000 person-years vs approximately 10 per 1000 person-years in the matched photon group (P = .085). Limitations include different methods of data collection, lack of radiation field size and dose, and the fact that 26% of proton-treated patients were lost to follow-up and second malignancy information was not available for this group. The authors concluded that the results are hypothesis generating and warrant further study.

Uncertainties of Proton Beam Therapy


The longest experience with protons has been using passively scattered beams. This technique, known as passively scattered proton therapy (PSPT), is a robust method of proton delivery which is less sensitive to treatment and patient variables. Passive scattered protons produce neutrons and these affect surrounding tissues negatively. Newer proton beam centers use pencil beam scanning technology. This allows for more conformal treatment delivery and has been also termed intensity modulated proton therapy (IMPT). Long-term follow-up with this technology is lacking. A recent review summarizes the status of IMPT declaring “currently, it is still unclear which patients will exhibit a significantly enhanced therapeutic ratio with IMPT over PSPT or IMRT.” Additionally, there are significant uncertainties about the physics and biology of protons in this setting. These include the complex interaction of scanning beams with moving tissues of different densities, less predictable dose distributions during treatment of radiosensitive HPV-positive tumors, and questions about the variable radiobiologic effectiveness of protons in situ. Proton plans generally assume a uniform relative biological effectiveness (RBE) of 1.1 compared to photons. The actual RBE is dependent on the fractionation and depth. At the distal edge of the Bragg peak, RBE has been measured at more than 5 times the assumed value. The existence of this uncertainty highlights the need for further prospective study of proton therapy, especially as treatment techniques such as pencil beam scanning continue to evolve.

Clinical Trials and Registries


There have been calls to cover the costs of PBT for patients enrolled in registry trials, but these studies lack the basic underpinning of clinical equipoise, as there is inherent bias among both patients and investigators that favors proton therapy. Proton beam therapy will not be covered when it is the experimental arm of a clinical trial or when used as part of a clinical registry unless criteria above are otherwise met.

Clinical Indications


This guideline outlines different applications of proton beam therapy in the treatment of malignant and benign tumors and arteriovenous malformations.

Base of Skull Tumors

Chordoma, Chondrosarcoma


Proton beam is appropriate for chordoma or chondrosarcoma when the following condition is met:

  • As postoperative therapy for individuals who have undergone biopsy or partial resection of a chordoma or low-grade (I or II) chondrosarcoma of the basisphenoid region (e.g., skull-base chordoma or chondrosarcoma), cervical spine, or sacral/lower spine and have residual, localized tumor without evidence of metastasis

Sinonasal Cancer


Proton beam is appropriate for locally advanced sinonasal carcinoma when the following condition is met:

  • Tumor involves the base of skull and proton therapy is needed to spare the orbit, optic nerve, optic chiasm, or brainstem

Central Nervous System

Arteriovenous Malformation (AVM)


Proton beam is appropriate for AVM when ANY of the following conditions are met:

  • Intracranial AVM not amenable to surgical excision or other conventional forms of treatment
  • Adjacent to critical structures such as the optic nerve, brain stem or spinal cord

Central Nervous System (CNS) Tumors


Proton beam is appropriate for CNS tumors when ALL the following conditions are met:

  • Including, but not limited to, primary or metastatic CNS malignancies, such as gliomas (both must be met)
    • When adjacent to critical structures such as the optic nerve, brain stem, or spinal cord
    • When other standard radiation techniques such as IMRT or standard stereotactic modalities would not sufficiently reduce the risk of radiation damage to the critical structure

Hepatobiliary cancer

Hepatocellular Carcinoma and Intrahepatic Cholangiocarcinoma


Proton beam is appropriate for hepatocellular cancer or intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma when the following condition is met:

  • To treat unresectable, non-metastatic hepatocellular cancer or intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma with curative intent

Melanoma

Ocular Melanoma


Proton beam is appropriate for ocular melanoma when the following condition is met:

  • To treat melanoma of the uveal tract (including the iris, choroid, or ciliary body) and no evidence of metastasis or extrascleral extension

Pediatric patients

All Tumor Types


Proton beam is appropriate for pediatric patients (age less than 21) when the following condition is met:

  • To treat all pediatric tumors in which radiation therapy is required

Re-irradiation


Proton beam is appropriate for the repeat irradiation of previously treated fields where the dose tolerance of surrounding normal structures would be exceeded with 3D conformal radiation or IMRT.

Exclusions


Proton beam therapy is not medically necessary for the treatment of all other conditions including:

  • Breast cancer
  • Esophageal cancer
  • Gastric cancer
  • Gynecologic cancer
  • Head and neck cancer
  • Hepatobiliary cancers not listed above
  • Lung cancer
  • Lymphoma (Hodgkin and non-Hodgkin)
  • Pancreatic cancer
  • Prostate cancer

Codes


CPT® (Current Procedural Terminology) is a registered trademark of the American Medical Association (AMA). CPT® five digit codes, nomenclature and other data are copyright by the American Medical Association. All Rights Reserved. AMA does not directly or indirectly practice medicine or dispense medical services. AMA assumes no liability for the data contained herein or not contained herein.


The following codes for treatments and procedures applicable to this document are included below for informational purposes. Inclusion or exclusion of a procedure, diagnosis or device code(s) does not constitute or imply member coverage or provider reimbursement policy. Please refer to the member’s contract benefits in effect at the time of service to determine coverage or non-coverage of these services as it applies to an individual member.


The following code list is not meant to be all-inclusive. Authorization requirements will vary by health plan. Please consult the applicable health plan for guidance on specific procedure codes.


Specific CPT codes for services should be used when available. Nonspecific or not otherwise classified codes may be subject to additional documentation requirements and review.

CPT/HCPCS

Proton Delivery


77520 Proton treatment delivery; simple, without compensation


77522 Proton treatment delivery; simple, with compensation


77523 Proton treatment delivery; intermediate


77525 Proton treatment delivery; complex

Planning


77301 Intensity modulated radiation therapy plan, including dose volume histogram for target and critical structure partial tolerance specifications (IMRT treatment plan)


77295 3-dimensional radiotherapy plan, including dose-volume histograms (3D conformal treatment plan)

CPT/HCPCS Groupers

Grouper Type Grouper ID Grouper Name Grouper included on order when submitted Dx/Anatomy Included Codes Qty Sent
Proton Beam Therapy
P 77520 Delivery N/A 77520, 77522, 77523, 77525 n
C 61796   N/A 61796, 61797, 61798, 61799 5
C 63620   N/A 63620, 63621 5
C 61800   N/A 61800 3
C 77432   N/A 77432 5
C 77435   N/A 77435 5
C S8030   N/A S8030 5
C 77301 N/A 77301, 77338, 77295 2

Grouper Types: P, Primary; C, Common

Notes: When criteria are met for the primary grouper (Grouper Type P), all of the included codes are passed on the extract with the associated quantity. Any of the included codes may be billed up to the specified total quantity limit. Codes listed in Grouper Type C are also included in the extract.

ICD-10 Diagnoses

Base of Skull Tumors

Chordoma, chondrosarcoma


C41.2 Malignant neoplasm of vertebral column


C41.4 Malignant neoplasm of pelvic bones, sacrum and coccyx


C41.9 Malignant neoplasm of bone and articular cartilage, unspecified

Sinonasal cancers


C11.0 – C11.9 Malignant neoplasm of nasopharynx


C30.0 Malignant neoplasm of nasal cavity


C31.0 – C31.9 Malignant neoplasm of accessory sinuses

Central Nervous System

Arteriovenous malformation


Q28.2 Arteriovenous malformation of cerebral vessels


Q28.3 Other malformations of cerebral vessels

Central nervous system tumors (excludes pituitary)


C71.0 – C71.9 Malignant neoplasm of brain


C72.0 – C72.9 Malignant neoplasm of spinal cord, cranial nerves, and other parts of central nervous system


C79.31 Secondary malignant neoplasm of brain


C79.49 Secondary malignant neoplasm of other parts of nervous system


D09.8 Carcinoma in situ of other specified sites


D33.0 – D33.9 Benign neoplasm of brain and other parts of central nervous system


D42.0 – D42.9 Neoplasm of uncertain behavior of meninges


D43.0 – D43.9 Neoplasm of uncertain behavior of brain and central nervous system


D49.6 Neoplasm of unspecified behavior of brain

Melanoma

Ocular melanoma


C69.30 Malignant neoplasm of unspecified choroid


C69.40 Malignant neoplasm of unspecified ciliary body


C69.90 Malignant neoplasm of unspecified site of unspecified eye

Pediatric patients

All tumor types


All ICD-10 diagnoses when age less than 21 years

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Referenced with permission from the NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology (NCCN Guidelines®) for Breast Cancer V4.2020, Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer V4.2020, and Prostate Cancer V1.2020. Available at: http://www.nccn.org. Accessed May 18, 2020. ©National Comprehensive Cancer Network, 2020. To view the most recent and complete version of the Guidelines, go online to http://www.nccn.org.


These Guidelines are a work in progress that may be refined as often as new significant data becomes available.


The NCCN Guidelines® are a statement of consensus of its authors regarding their views of currently accepted approaches to treatment. Any clinician seeking to apply or consult any NCCN Guidelines® is expected to use independent medical judgment in the context of individual clinical circumstances to determine any patient’s care or treatment. The National Comprehensive Cancer Network makes no warranties of any kind whatsoever regarding their content, use or application and disclaims any responsibility for their application or use in any way.

History

Status Review Date Effective Date Action
Archived 03/13/2022 Archived. Not to be used for dates of service on or after 03/13/2022.
Revised 05/11/2020 03/14/2021 Independent Multispecialty Physician Panel (IMPP) review. Added new indication for Hepatocellular carcinoma and intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma based on literature. Added grouper chart to code section.
Revised 03/25/2019 11/10/2019 IMPP review. Revised proton beam therapy considerations and indications for sinonasal cancer, melanoma of the uveal tract, and pediatric tumors. Updated references.
Revised 07/11/2018 03/09/2019 IMPP review. Added the General Clinical Guideline.
Revised 12/12/2017 03/12/2018 IMPP review. Revised proton beam therapy considerations and indications. Updated references.
Reviewed 06/13/2017 09/05/2017 IMPP review.
Reviewed 07/26/2016 02/20/2017 IMPP review.
Revised 08/27/2015 01/01/2016 IMPP review. Revised indications.
Created 05/14/2014 09/05/2014 IMPP review. Original effective date.

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