| Literature DB >> 24002603 |
S Kuku1, C Fragkos, M McCormack, A Forbes.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The number of women surviving cancer who live with symptoms of bowel toxicity affecting their quality of life continues to rise. In this retrospective study, we sought to describe and analyse the presenting clinical features in our cohort, and evaluate possible predictors of severity and chronicity in women with radiation-induced bowel injury after treatment for cervical and endometrial cancers.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24002603 PMCID: PMC3777000 DOI: 10.1038/bjc.2013.491
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Patient characteristics and cancer demographics; cervical and endometrial cancer
| Total no. of patients reviewed | 219 | 322 |
| Patients presenting with significant symptoms of chronic treatment-related bowel injury (% of total) | 77 (35%) | 75 (23%) |
| Median age (range) | 52 (27–81) | 63 (40–80) |
| I | 11 | 32 |
| II | 51 | 23 |
| III | 10 | 18 |
| IV | 4 | 0 |
| Recurrence | 1 | 3 |
| 1 | 3 | 3 |
| 2 | 40 | 42 |
| 3 | 25 | 25 |
| Unknown | 10 | 5 |
| Squamous cell | 57 | 0 |
| Adenocarcinoma | 17 | 61 |
| Adenosquamous | 1 | 0 |
| Small cell | 1 | 0 |
| Clear cell | 1 | 1 |
| Mixed | 0 | 6 |
| Uterine serous papillary | 0 | 3 |
| MMMT | 0 | 7 |
| Smokers | 32 (42%) | 5 (6.7%) |
| Bowel – IBS | 4 | 4 |
| Bowel – diverticular disease | 0 | 5 |
| Hypertension | 12 | 2 |
| Diabetes (type II) | 2 | 4 |
| Interval to presentation (months) | 8 (1–106) | 10 (1–61) |
Abbreviations: IBS=irritable bowel syndrome; MMMT=malignant mixed mullerian tumour (carcinosarcoma).
Stage I; IB1/2 (cervical), IB/C (endometrial)–FIGO 1988.
Histology; mixed: uterine serous papillary and adenocarcinoma.
Signs and symptoms of chronic treatment-induced bowel injury
| | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | |||||
| Abdo pain | 38 | 49.4 | 34 | 45.3 | 72 (47.4) |
| Bloating | 22 | 28.6 | 23 | 30.7 | 45 (29.6) |
| Nausea | 12 | 15.6 | 7 | 9.3 | 19 (12.5) |
| Vomiting | 12 | 15.6 | 5 | 6.7 | 17 (11.2) |
| SABO | 19 | 24.7 | 9 | 12.0 | 28 (18.4) |
| ABO | 6 | 7.8 | 2 | 2.7 | 8 (5.3) |
| Diarrhoea | 47 | 61.0 | 36 | 48.0 | 83 (54.6) |
| BO<4 per day | 51 | 66.2 | 49 | 65.3 | 100 (65.8) |
| BO>4 per day | 26 | 33.8 | 20 | 26.7 | 46 (30.3) |
| Urgency | 62 | 80.5 | 62 | 82.7 | 124 (81.6) |
| Faecal incontinence/leaking | 26 | 33.8 | 16 | 21.3 | 42 (27.6) |
| Flatulence | 12 | 15.6 | 12 | 16.0 | 24 (15.8) |
| PR bleed | 28 | 26.4 | 28 | 37.3 | 56 (36.8) |
| PR mucus | 7 | 9.1 | 6 | 8.0 | 13 (8.6) |
| SAQOL | 32 | 41.6 | 28 | 37.3 | 60 (39.5) |
Abbreviations: ALL=acute lymphoblastic leukemia; BO=(frequency); number of times on average ‘bowels opened' SAQOL=patients reporting ‘symptoms affecting their quality of life—‘QoL'.
SABO—intermittent subacute bowel obstruction.
ABO—acute bowel obstruction presenting as emergency.
Figure 1Interval to presentation with symptoms of radiation-induced bowel injury.
Factor analysis; component loadings for presenting symptoms of bowel injury
| | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | ||||||
| Nausea | 0.799 | ||||||
| Vomitting | 0.767 | ||||||
| SABO | 0.701 | ||||||
| ABO | 0.352 | ||||||
| BO>4 d | 0.794 | ||||||
| BO<4 d | 0.333 | 0.849 | |||||
| Diarrhoea | 0.34 | ||||||
| FI | 0.308 | 0.401 | |||||
| Bloating | 0.365 | 0.354 | 0.608 | ||||
| Flatulence | 0.373 | ||||||
| Abdo pain | 0.517 | 0.508 | 0.555 | ||||
| Urgency | 0.367 | 0.427 | 0.479 | ||||
| PRB | 0.205 | ||||||
| PR mucus | 0.124 | ||||||
Abbreviations: ABO=acute bowel obstruction; FI=faecal incontinence; PRB=per-rectal bleeding; PR mucus=per-rectal mucus; SABO=subacute bowel obstruction.
Factor analysis tells us what variables group or go together. Oblimin rotation generates both a pattern matrix and a structure matrix. The structure matrix is simply the factor loading matrix as in orthogonal rotation, representing the variance in a measured variable explained by a factor on both a unique and common contributions basis. The pattern matrix, in contrast, contains coefficients which just represent unique contributions (very similar to a correlation coefficient). For oblimin rotation, the researcher looks at both the structure and pattern coefficients when attributing a label to a factor. By one rule of thumb, a factor loading level over 0.3 in absolute value is considered to indicate that this variable belongs to a factor; in any event, factor loadings must be interpreted in the light of theory, not by arbitrary cutoff levels. In our case, we have highlighted with bold the loadings which indicated which variables where assigned to each component. Finally, the sum of the squared factor loadings for all factors for a given variable (row) is the variance in that variable accounted for by all the factors, and this is called the communality. The communality measures the percent of variance in a given variable explained by all the factors jointly and may be interpreted as the reliability of the indicator.
Patient status at last follow-up
| | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alive and well, bowel symptoms resolved | 21 | 21 | 42 | 27.6 |
| Alive with disease progression | 3 | 2 | 5 | 3.3 |
| Mild | 25 | 38 | 63 | 41.4 |
| Moderate | 4 | 1 | 5 | 3.3 |
| Severe, symptoms affecting QoL | 19 | 2 | 21 | 13.8 |
| Dead, recurrent disease | 3 | 9 | 12 | |
| Dead, secondary to enteritis complications | 1 | 0 | 1 | |
| Dead, other causes | 1 | 2 | 3 | |
| 5 | 11 | 16 | 10.5 | |
Abbreviation: QoL=quality of life.
Mild; urgency, frequency with loose stools <4 per day.
Moderate; patients requiring regular follow-up and further investigations with gastroenterologists+/colorectal surgeons.
Figure 2Follow-up of patients with bowel symptoms.
Univariate (unadjusted) ordinal regression analysis showing predictors of increasing chronic radiation enteritis/proctitis severity in the whole cohort
| Age | 0.96 (0.94–0.98) | 0.001 |
| Cancer type
(endometrial | 0.49 (0.26–0.93) | 0.028 |
| History of diabetes/hypertension | 1.57 (0.64–3.96) | 0.312 |
| History of previous IBS/diverticular disease | 1.52 (0.53–4.31) | 0.436 |
| Smoking history | 0.32 (0.17–0.77) | 0.008 |
| Stage of disease (cervix) | 0.76 (0.42–1.36) | 0.356 |
| Stage of disease (endo) | 0.78 (0.45–1.36) | 0.388 |
| NACT pre-chemoradiation (cervix) | 1.58 (0.41–2.50) | 0.976 |
| Extended field RT (pelvic side wall boost/pa strip) (cervix) | 0.37 (0.14–0.96) | 0.041 |
| Laparoscopic | 0.59 (0.21–1.65) | 0.311 |
| Chemo | 0.95 (0.34–2.63) | 0.921 |
| P/PA node dissection (endo) | 2.13 (0.58–7.75) | 0.255 |
| P/PA node dissection (cervix) | 0.67 (0.24–1.85) | 0.442 |
| Surgical treatment (no | 0.22 (0.08–0.55) | 0.001 |
| Factor 1 | 1.18 (0.86–1.63) | 0.302 |
| Factor 2 | 1.10 (0.80–1.51) | 0.548 |
| Factor 3 | 1.36 (1.00–1.86) | 0.053 |
Abbreviations: CI=confidence interval; NACT=neo-adjuvant chemotherapy; OR=odds ratio; P/PA=pelvic/para-aortic node dissection; RT=Radiotherapy.
Multivariate (adjusted) ordinal regression analysis showing predictors of increasing chronic radiation enteritis/proctitis severity in the whole cohort
| | ||||
| Age | 0.97 | 0.94 | 1.00 | 0.050 |
| Smoking | 0.42 | 0.18 | 0.98 | 0.044 |
| ‘Symptom cluster'/factor 3 | 1.51 | 1.08 | 2.11 | 0.017 |
| Cancer type
(cervical | 1.21 | 0.55 | 2.63 | 0.637 |
| Surgery (no | 0.23 | 0.09 | 0.65 | 0.005 |
Abbreviation: OR, odds ratio.
Surgical management of radiation-induced bowel injury
| | ||
|---|---|---|
| Small bowel resection+adhesiolysis | ||
| Primary anastamosis | 2 | 2 |
| Ileostomy | 1 | 0 |
| Reversal of ileostomy | 4 | 0 |
| Ileocaecal resection | 2 | 1 |
| Right hemicolectomy | ||
| Primary anastamosis | 2 | 1 |
| Colostomy formation | 2 | 1 |
| End colostomy formation (bypass) | 0 | |
| Adhesiolysis only | 0 | |
| Sigmoid stricture dilatation | 0 |
Previous small bowel resection and re-obstruction.