Radiation toxicity in prostate cancer patients

J. Stanić, V. Stankovic, M. Nikitović
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Prostate cancer (PC) is the most frequent male tumor, accounting for about one-third of all cancers in men. Since survival is often favorable regardless of therapy, treatment decisions may depend on therapy-specific health outcomes. The majority of men initially diagnosed with localized PC ultimately die with, rather than of, their disease. As a result, men who are diagnosed will live many years with the treatment's sequelae. The major therapeutic strategies include radical prostatectomy or external beam radiotherapy. Radiotherapy is one of the curative treatment options. The tumor dose-response relationship has been studied and is widely accepted. The unsatisfactory local control with doses < 70 Gy led to dose escalation using highly precise radiotherapy techniques - three-dimensional conformal radiotherapy and intensity-modulated radiotherapy enabling the delivery of high radiation doses up to 74 - 78 Gy. Bowel, rectal and urinary toxicities are the principal limiting factors in delivering a high dose. Acute symptoms include a change in bowel habits, urgency, and fecal incontinence. The most commonly reported late toxicities were chronic diarrhea, proctitis, or rectal bleeding. Several factors have been associated with increased gastrointestinal toxicity such as larger bowel volume receiving high doses, the patient's age, diabetes, and concomitant use of androgen deprivation therapy. Bladder damage resulting from acute radiation toxicity is manifested as radiation cystitis (frequent urination and dysuric disorders). Smoking, previous abdominopelvic surgeries and the use of diuretics significantly affect the occurrence of acute genitourinary toxicity grade ≥ 2. Risk factors for the development of late genitourinary complications are higher radiation dose, previous urinary problems, transurethral interventions, and acute genitourinary complications. It is essential to strike a balance between the therapeutic benefits and radiotherapy side effects. Severe late complications significantly reduce the quality of life (QOL) of PC survivors. Early detection and proper evaluation of complications are especially important in increasing the patient's QOL.
前列腺癌患者的辐射毒性
前列腺癌(PC)是最常见的男性肿瘤,约占男性所有癌症的三分之一。由于生存往往是有利的,无论治疗,治疗决定可能取决于治疗特定的健康结果。大多数最初诊断为局限性PC的男性最终死于疾病,而不是死于疾病本身。因此,被确诊的男性将带着治疗的后遗症生活多年。主要的治疗策略包括根治性前列腺切除术或外部放射治疗。放射治疗是一种治疗方法。肿瘤的剂量-反应关系已被研究并被广泛接受。剂量< 70 Gy的局部控制不能令人满意,导致使用高精度放射治疗技术——三维适形放射治疗和调强放射治疗,使高辐射剂量达到74 - 78 Gy。肠、直肠和泌尿毒性是提供高剂量的主要限制因素。急性症状包括排便习惯改变、尿急和大便失禁。最常见的晚期毒性是慢性腹泻、直肠炎或直肠出血。有几个因素与胃肠道毒性增加有关,如接受高剂量的肠容量增大、患者的年龄、糖尿病和同时使用雄激素剥夺治疗。急性辐射中毒引起的膀胱损伤表现为放射性膀胱炎(尿频和排尿障碍)。吸烟、既往盆腔手术和使用利尿剂显著影响急性泌尿生殖系统毒性(≥2级)的发生。晚期泌尿生殖系统并发症发生的危险因素是较高的辐射剂量、既往泌尿系统问题、经尿道干预和急性泌尿生殖系统并发症。在治疗益处和放疗副作用之间取得平衡是至关重要的。严重的晚期并发症显著降低PC幸存者的生活质量。早期发现和正确评估并发症对提高患者的生活质量尤为重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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