| Literature DB >> 29572337 |
Katie Spencer1, Rhona Parrish2, Rachael Barton3, Ann Henry4.
Abstract
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29572337 PMCID: PMC5865075 DOI: 10.1136/bmj.k821
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ ISSN: 0959-8138
Fig 1Linear accelerator used to deliver radiotherapy
Fig 2For radiotherapy to the head, neck, or upper chest, a close fitting mask maybe needed to ensure a consistent treatment position
Fig 3Computed tomograms showing the difference in radiotherapy dose distribution between simple, conventional palliative radiotherapy (A), and targeted stereotactic radiotherapy (B). The latter treatment plan allows a dose of roughly three times greater biological effectiveness to the target with significantly lower dose to surrounding tissue
Benefits of palliative radiotherapy for varying indications (evidence referenced is the highest level identified)
| Treatments assessed | Study and sample size | Endpoints | Results |
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| Single fraction radiotherapy | Chow et al 2012 | Pain response, re-treatment rate, pathological fracture rate. | 60.7% response rate (OR for single |
| Sze et al 2004 | Pain response, re-treatment rate, pathological fracture rate. | 59% response rate (OR for single | |
| Steenland et al 1999 | Pain response in remaining lifespan (1° endpoint), re-treatment rate, pathological fracture rate. | 71% response rate; 35% complete resolution of pain; median time to benefit 3 weeks. | |
| Single 8 Gy fraction of radiotherapy | Hoskin et al 2015 | Pain response at 4 weeks (1° endpoint), crossover, pathological fracture rate. | 53.1% response with radiotherapy |
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| Various palliative radiotherapy regimens | Stevens et al 2015 | Control of thoracic symptoms, overall survival | Pooled symptom response rates not reported due to study heterogeneity. |
| Various palliative radiotherapy regimens | Fairchild et al 2008 | Control of thoracic symptoms, overall survival | After high and low dose regimens, complete resolution of haemoptysis reported by 73.7% |
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| External radiotherapy (40 Gy in 20 fractions, twice daily) | Kassam et al 2008 | Dysphagia response at 56 days, survival, toxicity | Improved swallowing function reported by 69%, median time to benefit 4 weeks, duration of response 5.5 months |
| Oesophageal stenting with or without external radiotherapy | Javed et al 2010 | Duration of dysphagia relief after stenting, overall survival | Duration of dysphagia relief increased with radiotherapy (7 |
| Oesophageal brachytherapy with or without external radiotherapy | Rosenblatt et al 2010 | Dysphagia relief, overall survival | Improved duration of dysphagia relief with radiotherapy: at 200 days, 69.6% had not experienced a dysphagia event |
| Palliative radiotherapy for advanced gastric cancer | Tey et al 2017 | Reduction in gastric bleeding (response definitions varied) | Gastric bleeding reduced in 74% of patients (pooled analysis). Small numbers reported for pain and obstruction responses (n=18 and 33) |
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| 20 Gy in 5 fractions | Rades et al 2016 | Motor function at 1 month, local control, overall survival | No significant differences in mobility (P=0.86), local control (P=0.51), or survival (P=0.68). |
| 8 Gy single fraction | Maranzano et al 2009 | Symptom control (pain, motor, and sphincter function) at 1 month, toxicity, duration of response, overall survival | No significant difference in response rates or duration (P=0.40): median duration of response 5 months; median overall survival 4 months. |
| 16 Gy in 2 fractions | Maranzano et al 2005 | Symptom control (pain, motor, and sphincter function) at 1 month, toxicity, duration of response, overall survival | No significant difference in response rates or duration: median duration of response 3.5 months; median overall survival 4 months. |
| Radiotherapy (30 Gy in 10 fractions) with or without surgical decompression | Patchell et al 2005 | Mobility (time point unclear), continence, corticosteroid use, pain control, overall survival | Post-treatment ambulation rates 84% with surgery |
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| Whole brain radiotherapy (WBRT) (20 Gy in 5 fractions) | Mulvenna et al 2016 | Overall survival, quality of life (measured in QALYs), use of corticosteroids | All patients received dexamethasone. No difference in overall survival with or without WBRT (median survival 9.2 weeks |
| Effectiveness and adverse events after WBRT for adults with multiple brain metastases | Tsao et al 2012 | Overall survival, cerebral disease control, quality of life and symptom control | Unable to recommend one WBRT regimen over others due to lack of quality of life outcomes and no overall improvement in overall survival (n=3645, 8 trials). |
| Neurocognitive outcomes after stereotactic radiotherapy with or without WBRT. | Chang et al 2009 | Neurocognitive outcomes at 4 months, cerebral disease control | Addition of WBRT resulted in lower CNS recurrence at 1 year (73% recurrence-free |
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| 30 Gy in 5 fractions radiotherapy delivered every 3 days | Porceddu et al 2007 | Response rate, symptom control, quality of life, and toxicity. | 80% had an objective response at 2 weeks after treatment, 67% reported improved pain control, 33% felt their ability to eat solids was improved, 62% reported improved overall quality of life. |
| 42 Gy in 12 fractions radiotherapy delivered twice daily in 4 fraction blocks repeated 4 weekly | Corry et al 2005 | Response rate, symptom control, quality of life, and toxicity. | 53% objective response rate. Median overall survival 5.7 months (95% CI 3.4 to 9.3) and progression-free survival 3.1 months (2.2 to 6.1). |
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| 35 Gy in 10 fractions | Duchesne et al 2000 | Symptomatic improvement at 3 months. | No significant difference for any endpoint (overall survival HR 0.99 (0.82 to 1.21), P=0.933). |
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| 30-39 Gy in 10-13 fractions | Cameron et al 2016 | Symptomatic improvement at 3 months | Improvements in pain (77% (54% to 100%)), rectal dysfunction (90% (71% to 100%)), and bleeding (100%) |
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| Any external radiotherapy or brachytherapy regimen delivered palliatively to the cervix | van Lonkhuijzen et al 2011 | Symptomatic improvement | Wide heterogeneity in studies with variable time points and poor reporting limited this analysis. Bleeding improvement ranged from 45% to 100% of patients, pain reduction 31-100%, and discharge 15-100%. Toxicity not consistently reported |
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| Any palliative radiotherapy regimen delivered to the prostate | Cameron et al 2014 | Symptomatic improvement, quality of life, toxicity | Pooled response rates were 73% for haematuria, 80% pain, 63% bladder outlet obstruction, and 78% rectal symptoms. |
RCT=Randomised controlled trial, SR=Systematic review, all phase II studies were non-randomised. OR=odds ratio. HR=hazard ratio. QALY=quality adjusted life year. CNS=central nervous system. MRI=magnetic resonance imaging.
Management of the acute side effects of palliative radiotherapy by organ or tissue
| Anatomical site | Side effects | Management | Supporting evidence |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bone | 35% of patient in the first week after treatment to bone metastases experience a pain flare. This resolves within a median of 3 days | Oral dexamethasone 8 mg once daily before treatment and for 4 days after, possibly with oral proton pump inhibitor | Rate of flare significantly reduced with dexamethasone (26% |
| Lung | Cough after treatment is not well documented but common in practice | Routinely managed with medication (such as weak opioids) | Limited evidence supporting any specific intervention (SR, 326 patients, 9 studies) |
| Mediastinum | Oesophagitis results in odynophagia or dysphagia in 14-22% of treated lung cancer patients (SR) | Antacid mixed with local anaesthetic, simple analgesia, proton pump inhibitors, and soft bland diet. Dietetic referral and enteral feeding maybe required, particularly in patients with compromised swallow before treatment | Recommendation based on a recent literature review as no randomised evidence was identified to inform acute supportive management |
| Bowel or stomach | Nausea (such as seen during treatment to bone metastases in 61% or treatment for rectal cancer in 36%) | Antiemetics 30-60 minutes before, during, and after treatment (such as 5-HT3 receptor antagonists) | 5-HT3 antagonists reduced emesis compared with conventional antiemetics or placebo (SR of RCTs) and are recommended in international guidelines |
| Diarrhoea and abdominal discomfort during treatment for pelvic tumours in 20-40%, | Loperamide 2-4 mg and hyoscine butylbromide 20 mg as required. If diarrhoea severe (>6 bowel movements daily) or fails to improve within 12 hours, discuss with the treating oncology team | Recommendation based on regional guidelines and palliative prescribing as no randomised evidence identified | |
| Bladder | Dysuria, frequency, and nocturia. During the first few weeks after treatment in 33% and 20% of bladder and prostate cancer patients treated to the primary tumour | Simple analgesia, good fluid intake, and anticholinergic agents are used in routine care. | Recommendation based on regional practise as no randomised evidence identified. |
| Brain | Fatigue | Exercise, as possible, has been shown to reduce fatigue in cancer patients generally | Standardised mean difference in fatigue −0.27 (95% CI −0.37 to −0.17) with exercise (MA, 2648 patients, 38 trials). |
| Headache (32%) | Simple analgesia with dexamethasone 4 mg once daily if persistent | Recommendation based on routine palliative care prescribing | |
| Nausea and vomiting (10-16%) | Antiemetics (such as cyclizine) and dexamethasone if persistent | Recommendation based on routine palliative care prescribing | |
| Otitis externa (5%) | Otitis externa is often asymptomatic, steroid drops can be used if troublesome | No randomised evidence identified | |
| Skin | Sunburn-like erythema over treated area, peaks late in treatment and for about 10 days afterwards. Severity is dictated by dose | Daily washing, unperfumed emollient creams or soaps, and non-adhesive dressings. For more severe reactions (with skin breakdown) the treating department should be contacted for advice | Recommendation based on regional guidelines |
| Hair loss (most patients undergoing palliative radiotherapy to brain) | Wig referral before treatment can be arranged, although timing this can be difficult in the palliative setting | Information and alternative approaches to hair loss are available through a variety of websites | |
| Oral cavity and oropharynx | Oral or pharyngeal mucositis (63%) with pain and thickened secretions. | Oral hygiene, regular mouth washes (such as saline, sodium bicarbonate), topical analgesia or gels, nebulised saline and analgesia (including NSAIDs and opiates in appropriate formulations). Concerns for swallowing safety and nutritional status should be discussed with the treating team | No strong conclusions were reached for the management of existing mucositis in multiple SRs. |
RCT=randomised controlled trial, SR=systematic review, MA=meta-analysis, NSAID=non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug.