Coralie Arends , Pieter de Veij Mestdagh , Abrahim Al-Mamgani , Martijn Stuiver , Lisette van der Molen , Michiel van den Brekel
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background and purpose
Bilateral elective nodal irradiation (ENI) is part of the standard treatment for most head and neck cancers (HNC) that are treated with primary (chemo)radiotherapy. Recent studies indicate that unilateral radiotherapy can reduce radiation-related toxicities and improve quality of life. This study examines whether there is a difference in the prevalence and severity of internal lymphedema between patients with unilateral or bilateral radiotherapy.
Materials and methods
Internal lymphedema was scored on available laryngoscopy videos, using the revised Patterson scale, in patients included in a previous prospective study comparing uni- versus bilateral radiotherapy. Analysis was performed by descriptively comparing the variation in location and severity of internal lymphedema, and by calculating rank biserial correlation coefficients.
Results
Out of 100 potentially eligible patients, 41 patients with available good-quality laryngoscopy videos were included. Of these, twenty-three patients were treated with unilateral radiotherapy and 18 with bilateral radiotherapy. The median internal lymphedema score for all patients was 7 (range: 0–24). For the patients with unilateral radiotherapy, the median was 6 (range: 0–19), compared to 9.5 (range: 0–24) for the bilateral group. Nine patients had no internal lymphedema, six in the unilateral group and three in the bilateral group. The rank biserial correlation coefficients showed a negative correlation between lymphedema and unilateral radiotherapy for all regions in the larynx (range −0.19 to −0.63), and for the total lymphedema score −0.92 (95 % CI −0.97 to −0.82).
Conclusion
Internal lymphedema prevalent and severity are lower after unilateral radiotherapy for head and neck cancer, compared to the current standard of care bilateral radiotherapy.
期刊介绍:
Radiotherapy and Oncology publishes papers describing original research as well as review articles. It covers areas of interest relating to radiation oncology. This includes: clinical radiotherapy, combined modality treatment, translational studies, epidemiological outcomes, imaging, dosimetry, and radiation therapy planning, experimental work in radiobiology, chemobiology, hyperthermia and tumour biology, as well as data science in radiation oncology and physics aspects relevant to oncology.Papers on more general aspects of interest to the radiation oncologist including chemotherapy, surgery and immunology are also published.