| Literature DB >> 24195692 |
Marte Grønlie Cameron1, Christian Kersten, Ingvild Vistad, Sophie Fosså, Marianne Grønlie Guren.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Locally advanced and recurrent rectal cancers frequently cause pelvic morbidity including pain, bleeding and mass effect. Palliative pelvic radiotherapy is used to relieve these symptoms and delay local progression. There is no established optimal radiotherapy regimen and clinical practices vary. Our aim was to review the efficacy and toxicity of palliative pelvic radiotherapy of symptomatic rectal cancer and to evaluate different fractionation schedules, based on published literature.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24195692 PMCID: PMC3894715 DOI: 10.3109/0284186X.2013.837582
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Oncol ISSN: 0284-186X Impact factor: 4.089
Figure 1.Study flowchart.
Characteristics of studies of palliative pelvic radiotherapy of rectal cancer.
| Author/year | Study design and treatment period | Participants | Radiotherapy (Dose range/fraction size/treatment period) | Relevant outcome | Follow-up |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Allum [ | Retrospective |
| 30–45 Gy/3 Gy | Pain relief, 3-point scale | NR |
| Carlsson [ | Pro, non-randomized, controlled trial, NR | 79 inoperable or recurrent rectal cancer | 30 or 45 Gy/2 Gy | Pain relief, 4-point scale | 1 mo |
| Ciatto [ | Retrospective 1956–1976 | N = 108 recurrent rectal or RS cancer | 35–50 Gy/2 Gy/4–5 wk Boost of 10–15 Gy in a few cases | Complete regression of symptoms | Minimum 5 yr None lost |
| DeRenzis [ | Retrospective 1981–1984 |
| Palliation: 40–50 Gy Cure: > 50 Gy | Symptom relief, not defined | 35/35–2 yr 21/35–3 yr |
| Dobrowsky [ | Retrospective 1975–1982 | 58 rectal cancer recurrence | 15–70 Gy (some given split course) | Pain relief, 4-point scale | Minimum 2 yr None lost |
| Gescher [ | Retrospective 1977–1983 |
| 50 –70 Gy/2–2.5 Gy/5–9 wk | Symptom relief, dichotomized and PI | NR |
| Guiney [ | Retrospective 1981–1990 | 57 residual rectal or RS cancer | 45 Gy/3 Gy/4 wk 30 Gy/5 Gy/4 wk | Symptom relief, 3-point scale | Median 49 mo (range 5–80) |
| James [ | Retrospective Period NR | 143 symptomatic recurrent rectal cancer | < 10 Gy to > 20 Gy | Symptom relief, 3-point scale | NR. 24 lost to follow-up |
| Kimmig [ | Retrospective 1979–1985 |
| 60–66 Gy Perineal affection received additional MeV | Pain relief, dichotomized | 2–8 yr |
| Murdock [ | Retrospective 1957–1962 | N = 13 perineal recurrence of CRC | 24–56 Gy/2 Gy/1–4 wk | Symptom relief, 4-point scale | NR |
| Murphy [ | Retrospective 1942–1961 | 135 irradiated rectal or RS cancer | 20–60 Gy/2–7 wk | Palliation, not defined | NR |
| O’Connell [ | RCT NR | 44 inoperable or recurrent rectal or RS cancer | 50 Gy/2 Gy/7 wk (split-course) | Pain relief, not defined | NR |
| Pacini [ | Retrospective 1956–1983 |
| 35–65 Gy/2–3 Gy/3–7 wk | Symptom relief, dichotomized and PI | NR. None lost to follow-up |
| Påhlman [ | Pro & retrospective 1979–1983 | 39 inoperable rectal or RS cancer | 46 Gy/2 Gy/4–5 wk | Symptom relief, 3-point scale | NR |
| Ruggieri [ | Retrospective 1976–1985 |
| 30–60 Gy/1.6–2.5/3–8 wk Some received additional perineal boost | Pain relief, 4-point scale | 3 mo |
| Sinha [ | Retrospective 1974–1983 | 48 recurrent rectal or RS cancer | Mean 50 Gy/2 Gy/5–5.5 wk 8/25 received additional 2 Gy × 5 boost | Symptom relief, dichotomized | NR |
| Sklaroff [ | Retrospective 1961– ? |
| 40–50 Gy | Symptom relief, not defined | Minimum 6 mo |
| Smedal [ | Retrospective NR |
| 20–60 Gy | Palliation, 4-point scale | NR |
| Soleimani [ | Retrospective 1955–1969 | 110 recurrent or metastatic CRC | 400–1750 NSDE | Symptom relief, 4-point scale | NR |
| Stearns [ | Retrospective 1965–1968 |
| 20–25 Gy/2–3 wk Several repeated courses | Pain relief, 4-point scale | Through January 1968 or until death |
| Trotter [ | RCT 1985–1991 | 73 inoperable or recurrent rectal cancer | Median 45 Gy (16.2–54 Gy)/1.5–1.8 Gy/ 5.5 wk (1.5–9) | Reduction in pain score, 4–5-point scale | Until progression or death |
| Urdaneta-Lafee [ | Retrospective NR | 135 inoperable or recurrent rectal cancer | 10–60 Gy/2 Gy | Symptom relief, dichotomized | NR. 2 lost to follow-up |
| Wang [ | Retrospective 1940–1960 | 111 inoperable, residual or recurrent rectal, RS or sigmoid cancer | < 20 Gy to > 50 Gy | Symptom relief, dichotomized | NR |
| Williams [ | Retrospective ?–1946 | 192 rectal cancer | One patient given 50 Gy/4–6 wk | Relief of symptoms, not defined | NR. 2 lost to follow-up |
| Williams [ | Retrospective 1937–1954 |
| Aim 60 Gy/1.5–2 Gy/6–8 wk | Relief of symptoms, 3-point scale | Several yr |
| Williams [ | Retrospective NR |
| 30–60 Gy/3–6 wk | Relief of symptoms, dichotomized | NR |
| Wise [ | Retrospective NR |
| Mean 46 Gy (30–60) 6 patients previously treated with EBRT | Pain relief, 3-point scale | NR |
CRC, colorectal cancer; EBRT, external beam radiotherapy; gp, group; Gy, Gray; MeV, mega electron volt; mo, months; NR, not reported; NSDE, nominal standard dose equivalents; PI, palliative index (symptom-free period relative to survival duration); Pro, prospective; RCT, randomized controlled trial; RS, rectosigmoid; RSN, number of patients in the relevant subgroup; wk, weeks; yr, years.
Figure 2.Arrows indicate no upper or lower limit. • = mean dose only. ♦ = dose reported for only one patient. Study by Soleimani is not listed (dose in NSDE).
Symptomatic response to palliative pelvic radiotherapy of rectal cancer.
| Author | Radiation dose (Gy) | Symptoms included in the reported response | Response | Duration in months (range) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Allum [ | 5–45 | Pain | Pain 13/19 | Median 3 (1–7) |
| Carlsson [ | 30 or 45 | Pain | Pain 40/43 | Mean 6 (2–10) |
| Ciatto [ | 35–65 | Pain, vaginal bld/dc, rectal do, dysuria |
| 6: 33%, 12: 15% |
| DeRenzis [ | < 40 to > 50 | Pain, rectal bld/dc, urinary do, vaginal bld/dc |
| 6 (or death): 71% |
| Dobrowsky [ | 15–70 | Pain | Pain 34/38 | NR |
| Gescher [ | 50–70 | Pain, defecation do, rectal bld/dc, vaginal bld, mass |
| Mean 9 (0–53), 6: 50% |
| Guiney [ | 30–45 | NS |
| NR |
| James [ | < 10 to > 20 | Pain, mass, bld/dc, urinary, neurologic |
| NR |
| Kimmig [ | 60–66 | Pain | Pain 53/74 | 6–12 |
| Murdock [ | 24–56 | Pain, mass/ulceration, dc, edema |
| R 5–18, 6: 44%, 12: 33% |
| Murphy [ | 20–60 | Pain, mass |
| 6: 58%, 12: 42%, 24: 8% |
| O’Connell [ | 50 | Pain | Pain 17/18 | Median 5 (1–44+) |
| Pacini [ | 35–65 | Pain, vaginal bld/dc, dysuria, rectal do |
| 6: 32%, 12: 13%, 24: 6% |
| Påhlman [ | 46 | Bld, pain, altered bowel habit, soiling, incontinence |
| Median 5 (1–20) |
| Ruggieri [ | 30–60 | Pain, nodules, mass, bld | Pain 45/67 | 3: 32% |
| Sinha [ | Avg 50 | Pain, rectal bld/dc, perineal nodules, vaginal dc, diarrhea, dysuria | Pain 13/23; bld 2/3; dc 4/6; diarrhea 2/2; nodules 2/3;dysuria 1/2 | NR |
| Sklaroff [ | 40–50 | Bld |
| 6: 90% |
| Smedal [ | 20–60 | Pain, bld/dc, mass |
| 6: > 50%, 12: > 26% |
| Soleimani [ | 400–1750 rets | “Pelvic syndrome” | “Pelvic syndrome” 57/79 | NR |
| Stearns [ | 20–25 | NS |
| 6: 80% |
| Trotter [ | 16–54 | Pain | Pain 21/37 | NR |
| Urdaneta–Lafee [ | 10–60 | Bld, pain, diarrhea, constipation, tenesmus, urinary |
| NR |
| Wang[ | < 20 to > 50 | Pain, mass, bld/dc |
| NR |
| Williams [ | NR | Pain, tenesmus, bld, dc, ulceration |
| NR |
| Williams [ | 60 | Bld, rectal dc, pain, tenesmus | Bld 121/135; dc 77/116; pain 78/102; tenesmus 48/66 | NR |
| Williams [ | 30–60 | Pain, mass, dc, bld, urinary, edema, diarrhea |
| 3: 55%, 6: 32%, 12: 12% |
| Wise [ | 30–60 | Pain, mass, vaginal bld, perineal abscess | Pain 18/18; mass 5/5; vaginal bld 3/3 | Mean 4.5 (3 weeks–18 months) |
*Symptoms are listed in order of their reported frequencies.
ˆOverall symptomatic response (in bold), unless otherwise stated.
¤, bleeding, tenesmus, discharge, pain, urinary symptoms and edema.
#, nominal standard dose equivalents (NSDE); Bld, bleeding; dc, discharge; do, disorder; NR, not reported; NS, not specified other than as “symptoms”; R, range.
Pooled symptomatic response rates according to authors’ own definitions, at variable time points after palliative pelvic radiotherapy.
| Symptom | Response |
|---|---|
| Overall response, including “pelvic syndrome” [ | 818/1084 = 75% |
| Pain [ | 437/561 = 78% |
| Bleeding and discharge [ | 251/308 = 81% |
| Mass and tenesmus [ | 65/91 = 71% |
| Other (diarrhea, nodules, dysuria, etc) [ | 26/32 = 72% |
*Symptomatic responses are dichotomized as “response” or “no response”.
¤Williams’ 1949 study is not included in the table because the number of responses cannot be determined.
Toxicity reported in studies of palliative pelvic radiotherapy of rectal cancer.
| Author | Gastrointestinal | Genitourinary | Skin/connective tissue |
|---|---|---|---|
| Allum [ | mild | NR | NR |
| Carlsson [ | none observed | none observed | none observed |
| Ciatto [ | mild, | NR | mild |
| DeRenzis [ | mild | mild | mild |
| Dobrowsky [ | mild | mild | mild |
| Gescher [ |
| NR | mild 23/51 |
| Guiney [ | moderate | NR | moderate 1/27 |
| James [ | mild 13/119, severe | NR | NR |
| Murdock [ | NR | NR | mild |
| O’Connell [ | mild – moderate | NR | NR |
| Pacini [ | mild | NR | mild |
| Sinha [ | mild – moderate 9/25 | NR | mild 1/25 |
| Sklaroff [ | mild | NR |
|
| Smedal [ | severe 4/50 |
| NR |
| Stearns [ | mild | NR | NR |
| Trotter [ | 11/37 grade 3 or 4 (WHO criteria) | NR | NR |
| Urdaneta-Lafee [ | mild – moderate | NR | NR |
| Williams [ | mild – moderate | moderate 19/192 | mild |
| Williams [ | mild – moderate | mild – moderate | mild – moderate |
| Williams [ | mild – moderate | moderate | severe |
| Wise [ | mild – moderate 11/22, severe 3/22 | moderate 2/22 | moderate – severe 5/22 |
Late complications are indicated in bold type text.
NR, not reported; SBO, small bowel obstruction; WHO, World Health Organization.
*Mild indicates that the author has described the toxicity as “mild” or as not requiring more than symptomatic measures.
**Moderate indicates that the author has described the toxicity as “moderate” or that the treatment was interrupted due to toxicity.
***Severe indicates that the author has described the toxicity as “severe” or that the treatment was discontinued due to toxicity.