Radiation Oncology (London, England) | 2021

Short-course compared to long-course palliative radiotherapy for oesophageal cancer: a single centre observational cohort study

 
 
 
 

Abstract


Background Common symptoms of oesophageal cancer are dysphagia, pain, and bleeding. These symptoms can be relieved with palliative radiotherapy. The aim of this study was to analyse the outcome of two different palliative radiotherapy schedules. Methods We conducted a retrospective cohort study on palliative radiotherapy for oesophageal cancer given at Karolinska University Hospital. Patients included were treated with either short-course (20\xa0Gy in 4\xa0Gy fractions daily, 5 consecutive workdays) or long-course (30–39\xa0Gy in 3\xa0Gy fractions, 10–13 consecutive workdays) palliative external beam radiotherapy between January 2009 and December 2013. The primary endpoint was dysphagia relief and secondary endpoints were adverse events, re-interventions, and overall survival. Cox regression analyses were used to estimate the effect of treatment schedule on survival. Results A total of 128 patients received external beam radiotherapy under the study period, of these 75 (58.6%) received short-course radiotherapy and 53 (41.4%) long-course radiotherapy. Sixteen (30.8%) patients experienced dysphagia relief after short-course radiotherapy and 9 (22.0%) patients after long-course radiotherapy ( p \u2009=\u20090.341). Acute toxicity was less frequent after short-course radiotherapy than after long-course radiotherapy, particularly oesophagitis (35.4% vs. 56.0%, p \u2009=\u20090.027) and nausea/emesis (18.5% vs. 36.0% p \u2009=\u20090.034). Re-interventions tended to be more common after short-course radiotherapy (32.0%) than after long-course radiotherapy (18.9%) ( p \u2009=\u20090.098). There was no difference in overall survival between the two groups. Conclusions Short- and long-course palliative radiotherapy for oesophageal cancer were equally effective to relieve dysphagia and no difference was seen in overall survival. Acute toxicity was, however, more frequent and more severe after long-course radiotherapy. Our results suggest that short-course radiotherapy is better tolerated with equal palliative effects as long-course radiotherapy.

Volume 16
Pages None
DOI 10.1186/s13014-021-01880-9
Language English
Journal Radiation Oncology (London, England)

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