| Literature DB >> 30595809 |
Joanne M van der Velden1, Yvette M van der Linden2, Anne L Versteeg3, Jorrit-Jan Verlaan3, A Sophie Gerlich1, Bart J Pielkenrood1, Nicolien Kasperts1, Helena M Verkooijen1,4.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Radiotherapy is the standard local treatment for patients with painful bone metastases, but effectiveness has primarily been evaluated in trial populations. The aim of this study was to study pain response to palliative radiotherapy in a prospective cohort of unselected patients with bone metastases.Entities:
Keywords: Bone metastases; Effectiveness; Palliative radiotherapy; Prospective cohort study
Year: 2018 PMID: 30595809 PMCID: PMC6290653 DOI: 10.1007/s13566-018-0363-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Radiat Oncol ISSN: 1948-7908
Fig. 1Study flow chart
Characteristics of the first 500 patients in the PRESENT cohort
| Entire cohort, | Non-assessable patientsa, | |
|---|---|---|
| Gender | ||
| Male | 255 (59%) | 27 (64%) |
| Female | 177 (41%) | 15 (36%) |
| Age | ||
| Median (range) | 67 (28–90) | 64 (49–79) |
| Primary cancer site | ||
| Prostate | 127 (29%) | 6 (14%) |
| Breast | 97 (23%) | 5 (12%) |
| Lung | 97 (23%) | 19 (45%) |
| Other | 111 (25%) | 12 (29%) |
| Localizationb | ||
| Spine | 302 (63%) | 40 (72%) |
| Pelvis | 98 (20%) | 11 (20%) |
| Long bones | 33 (7%) | 1 (2%) |
| Ribs | 12 (3%) | 1 (2%) |
| Other | 35 (7%) | 2 (4%) |
| Radiation treatment | ||
| 8 Gy; 1 × 8 Gy | 290 (67%) | 50 (86%) |
| 30 Gy; 10 × 3 Gy | 72 (17%) | 3 (5%) |
| Other | 70 (16%) | 5 (9%) |
| Visceral and/or brain metastases | ||
| Visceral | 170 (39%) | 22 (52%) |
| Brain | 6 (1%) | 0 |
| Both visceral and brain | 6 (1%) | 2 (5%) |
| WHO performance statusc | ||
| WHO 0–1 | 202 (53%) | 9 (26%) |
| WHO 2 | 146 (39%) | 19 (54%) |
| WHO 3–4 | 32 (8%) | 7 (20%) |
| Pain score | ||
| Mean ± SD | 6.4 ± 2.2 | 6.5 ± 2.6 |
| Median (range) | 7 (0–10) | 6.5 (0–10) |
| Pain medicationd | ||
| No use | 36 (8%) | 0 |
| Phase 1 or 2 | 130 (30%) | 7 (17%) |
| Phase 3 or 4 | 264 (62%) | 34 (81%) |
| Use of corticosteroidse | ||
| No | 269 (65%) | 21 (51%) |
| Yes, during radiotherapy | 18 (4%) | 3 (7%) |
| Yes, for neurological complaints | 29 (7%) | 2 (5%) |
| Yes, for other reasons | 53 (13%) | 11 (27%) |
| Yes, for unknown reasons | 47 (11%) | 4 (10%) |
aPatients not returning questionnaires during follow-up
bIn total, 73 patients had two or more lesions at baseline
cThe WHO is a conditional score ranging from 0 (normal situation, no complaints) to 4 (completely disabled). Of 52 patients (12%), WHO status was missing
dPain medication phase 1: non-opioids like paracetamol, NSAIDs; phase 2: mild opioids like tramadol; phase 3: strong opioids like morphine; phase 4: non-oral administration of opioids. Data on pain medication was missing in two patients (0.004%)
eFor corticosteroid use, data of 16 patients (4%) were missing
Best response outcomes in 2–12 weeks after radiotherapy according to the consensus criteria [16]
| Response type | Total treated population ( | All patients surviving at least 2 weeks patients ( | Assessable patients ( | Worst case scenario ( | Best case scenario ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Responders | 262 (61%) | 262 (63%) | 262 (67%) | 262 (61%) | 304 (70%) |
| Complete response | 109 (25%) | 109 (26%) | 109 (30%) | 109 (25%) | NA |
| Partial response | 153 (36%) | 153 (36%) | 153 (38%) | 153 (36%) | NA |
| Non-responders | 128 (29%) | 128 (30%) | 128 (33%) | 170 (39%) | 128 (30%) |
| Stable pain | 66 (16%) | 66 (16%) | 66 (17%) | NA | NA |
| Undetermineda | 20 (5%) | 20 (5%) | 20 (5%) | NA | NA |
| Pain progression | 42 (10%) | 42 (10%) | 42 (10%) | NA | NA |
| Unknown | 42 (10%) | 29 (7%) | NA | NA | NA |
aResponse not captured by response, stable pain, or pain progression, for example, a patient with decreasing pain scores with simultaneously increasing opioid use
Best response outcomes in 2–12 weeks after radiotherapy, per subgroup
| Response type | Total treated population ( | Patients < 68 years ( | All patients with breast or prostate cancer ( | All patients with spinal metastasesa ( | Patients in good physical conditionb ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Responders | 262 (61%) | 132 (56%) | 157 (70%) | 172 (60%) | 140 (70%) |
| Complete response | 109 (25%) | 49 (21%) | 71 (32%) | 72 (25%) | 67 (33%) |
| Partial response | 153 (35%) | 83 (36%) | 86 (38%) | 100 (35%) | 73 (36%) |
| Non-responders | 128 (27%) | 78 (33%) | 56 (25%) | 85 (29%) | 53 (26%) |
| Stable pain | 66 (16%) | 42 (18%) | 29 (13%) | 47 (16%) | 27 (13%) |
| Undetermined | 20 (5%) | 9 (4%) | 7 (3%) | 15 (5%) | 8 (4%) |
| Pain progression | 42 (10%) | 27 (11%) | 20 (9%) | 23 (8%) | 18 (9%) |
| Unknown | 42 (10%) | 24 (11%) | 11 (5%) | 32 (11%) | 9 (4%) |
aNumber of patients is lower than the number of spinal lesions; some patients had more than one spinal lesion which needed radiation therapy
bAll patients with WHO performance status of 0 or 1, indicating no or few symptoms
Fig. 2Pain scores during the first 12 weeks after treatment for all patients, patients with spinal metastases, patients with breast or prostate cancer, and patients in good clinical condition (i.e., WHO score 0–1). Pain was scored on a 11-point pain scale ranging from 0 (no pain) to 10 (worst imaginable pain). The numbers below the graph indicate the number of patients that provided pain scores at specific time points