OBJECTIVE: The minimum dose required to electively irradiate all of part of the low neck for squamous cell carcinoma of the oropharynx is 50 Gy in 25 fractions or its radiobiological equivalent. The purpose of our study is to determine the incidence of hypothyroidism when the thyroid is treated only in the low-neck radiotherapy (RT) field to approximately 50 Gy. METHODS AND MATERIALS: 390 patients with oropharyngeal carcinoma received RT between 1990 and 2000, had no prior thyroid disease or surgery, and had RT involving the standard anterior low-neck field including the thyroid with a dose equivalent to 50 Gy at 2Gy/fx with or without a boost to a portion of the field to 60 to 70 Gy. The end point was hypothyroidism defined as thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) above the upper limit of the normal range. RESULTS: As we did not routinely monitor TSH during this study, it was obtained in 169 of 390 patients. Median follow-up on all 390 patients was 6.1 years. The incidence of hypothyroidism was calculated for 2 groups: 169 patients with TSH data and the total population of 390 patients. For both analyses, patients were censored at last follow-up if the TSH level was normal, or if TSH was not checked. The incidence of hypothyroidism at 5 years was 31% for all 390 patients and 54% for the subset of 169 patients with TSH data. Adjuvant chemotherapy and/or planned neck dissection may be associated with a small increased risk of hypothyroidism. CONCLUSIONS: Including the thyroid in the low-neck field to 50 Gy results in hypothyroidism in 30% to 50% of patients at 5 years, suggesting that the threshold for this complication is <50 Gy.
OBJECTIVE: The minimum dose required to electively irradiate all of part of the low neck for squamous cell carcinoma of the oropharynx is 50 Gy in 25 fractions or its radiobiological equivalent. The purpose of our study is to determine the incidence of hypothyroidism when the thyroid is treated only in the low-neck radiotherapy (RT) field to approximately 50 Gy. METHODS AND MATERIALS: 390 patients with oropharyngeal carcinoma received RT between 1990 and 2000, had no prior thyroid disease or surgery, and had RT involving the standard anterior low-neck field including the thyroid with a dose equivalent to 50 Gy at 2Gy/fx with or without a boost to a portion of the field to 60 to 70 Gy. The end point was hypothyroidism defined as thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) above the upper limit of the normal range. RESULTS: As we did not routinely monitor TSH during this study, it was obtained in 169 of 390 patients. Median follow-up on all 390 patients was 6.1 years. The incidence of hypothyroidism was calculated for 2 groups: 169 patients with TSH data and the total population of 390 patients. For both analyses, patients were censored at last follow-up if the TSH level was normal, or if TSH was not checked. The incidence of hypothyroidism at 5 years was 31% for all 390 patients and 54% for the subset of 169 patients with TSH data. Adjuvant chemotherapy and/or planned neck dissection may be associated with a small increased risk of hypothyroidism. CONCLUSIONS: Including the thyroid in the low-neck field to 50 Gy results in hypothyroidism in 30% to 50% of patients at 5 years, suggesting that the threshold for this complication is <50 Gy.
Authors: Ren Luo; Vincent W C Wu; Binghui He; Xiaoying Gao; Zhenxi Xu; Dandan Wang; Zhining Yang; Mei Li; Zhixiong Lin Journal: BMC Cancer Date: 2018-05-18 Impact factor: 4.430