PURPOSE: To evaluate results on the functional outcome and to determine prognostic factors and long-term response to low-dose megavoltage irradiation. PATIENTS AND METHODS: A total dose of 6.0 Gy given in two weekly fractions of 1.0 Gy was applied to 305 sites (252 patients). After 6 weeks, 97 sites (31.8%) received a second radiotherapy (RT) course. Assessment system was a function score which was documented before RT, at the end of each RT course, and at 6 weeks and 6 months after treatment. After an observation period of >/= 24 months, a follow-up examination was attempted to evaluate the late response. RESULTS: At 6-month follow-up, 85.6% responded with a score improvement. The outcome was excellent (score: 90-100) in 135/305 sites (44.3%), good (score: 70-85) in 60/305 sites (19.7%), moderate (score: 45-65) in 63/305 (20.7%) sites, and poor (score: 0-40) in 47/305 sites (15.4%). 231/305 sites (75.7%) had no or mild pain. 296/305 (97,0%) had no or only slight limitations in work and 253/305 (82,9%) in daily activities. 255/305 (83,6%) had no or slight discomfort in gait. The long-term follow-up after a mean observation period of 48.4 months revealed 15 recurrences (7.3%). The patients' age, sex, and the duration of symptoms before initiation of RT (</= 6 months vs. > 6 months) did not prove to be prognostic factors. No early or late toxicity related to the use of RT was detected. CONCLUSION: Megavoltage 6-MV photon-beam irradiation is a safe, effective and long-acting treatment modality in the management of heel spur patients. The function score has been proven to be a feasible method in clinical practice for evaluation of treatment outcome.
PURPOSE: To evaluate results on the functional outcome and to determine prognostic factors and long-term response to low-dose megavoltage irradiation. PATIENTS AND METHODS: A total dose of 6.0 Gy given in two weekly fractions of 1.0 Gy was applied to 305 sites (252 patients). After 6 weeks, 97 sites (31.8%) received a second radiotherapy (RT) course. Assessment system was a function score which was documented before RT, at the end of each RT course, and at 6 weeks and 6 months after treatment. After an observation period of >/= 24 months, a follow-up examination was attempted to evaluate the late response. RESULTS: At 6-month follow-up, 85.6% responded with a score improvement. The outcome was excellent (score: 90-100) in 135/305 sites (44.3%), good (score: 70-85) in 60/305 sites (19.7%), moderate (score: 45-65) in 63/305 (20.7%) sites, and poor (score: 0-40) in 47/305 sites (15.4%). 231/305 sites (75.7%) had no or mild pain. 296/305 (97,0%) had no or only slight limitations in work and 253/305 (82,9%) in daily activities. 255/305 (83,6%) had no or slight discomfort in gait. The long-term follow-up after a mean observation period of 48.4 months revealed 15 recurrences (7.3%). The patients' age, sex, and the duration of symptoms before initiation of RT (</= 6 months vs. > 6 months) did not prove to be prognostic factors. No early or late toxicity related to the use of RT was detected. CONCLUSION: Megavoltage 6-MV photon-beam irradiation is a safe, effective and long-acting treatment modality in the management of heel spurpatients. The function score has been proven to be a feasible method in clinical practice for evaluation of treatment outcome.
Authors: Freddy Djiepmo; Bálint Tamaskovics; Edwin Bölke; Matthias Peiper; Jan Haussmann; Judith Neuwahl; Danny Jazmati; Kitti Maas; Livia Schmidt; Roman Gelzhäuser; Christoph Schleich; Stefanie Corradini; Klaus Orth; Martijn van Griensven; Amir Rezazadeh; Kimia Karimi; Wilfried Budach; Christiane Matuschek Journal: Eur J Med Res Date: 2022-02-23 Impact factor: 2.175