Patient- and physician-reported radiation-induced toxicity of short course radiotherapy with a prolonged interval to surgery for rectal cancer
Publication date
2023-01
Authors
Verweij, Maaike E
Hoendervangers, S
von Hebel, C M
Pronk, A. Akke
Schiphorst, A H W
Consten, E C J
Smits, A B
Heikens, J T
Verdaasdonk, E G G
Rozema, T
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Supervisors
Document Type
Article
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Abstract
Aim: A prolonged interval (>4 weeks) between short-course radiotherapy (25 Gy in five fractions) (SCRT-delay) and total mesorectal excision for rectal cancer has been associated with a decreased postoperative complication rate and offers the possibility of organ preservation in the case of a complete tumour response. This prospective cohort study systematically evaluated patient-reported bowel dysfunction and physician-reported radiation-induced toxicity for 8 weeks following SCRT-delay. Method: Patients who were referred for SCRT-delay for intermediate risk, oligometastatic or locally advanced rectal cancer were included. Repeated measurements were done for patient-reported bowel dysfunction (measured by the low anterior resection syndrome [LARS] questionnaire and categorized as no, minor or major LARS) and physician-reported radiation-induced toxicity (according to Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events version 4.0) before start of treatment (baseline), at completion of SCRT and 1, 2, 3, 4, 6 and 8 weeks thereafter. Results: Fifty-one patients were included; 31 (61%) were men and the median age was 67 years (range 44–91). Patient-reported bowel dysfunction and physician-reported radiation-induced toxicity peaked at weeks 1–2 after completion of SCRT and gradually declined thereafter. Major LARS was reported by 44 patients (92%) at some time during SCRT-delay. Grade 3 radiation-induced toxicity was reported in 17 patients (33%) and concerned predominantly diarrhoea. No Grade 4–5 radiation-induced toxicity occurred. Conclusion: During SCRT-delay, almost every patient experiences temporary mild–moderate radiation-induced toxicity and major LARS, but life-threatening toxicity is rare. SCRT-delay is a safe alternative to SCRT-direct surgery that should be proposed when counselling rectal cancer patients on neoadjuvant strategies.
Keywords
low anterior resection syndrome, patient-reported outcomes, radiation-induced toxicity, rectal cancer, short course radiotherapy, Gastroenterology, Journal Article
Citation
Verweij, M E, Hoendervangers, S, von Hebel, C M, Pronk, A, Schiphorst, A H W, Consten, E C J, Smits, A B, Heikens, J T, Verdaasdonk, E G G, Rozema, T, Verkooijen, H M, van Grevenstein, W M U & Intven, M P W 2023, 'Patient- and physician-reported radiation-induced toxicity of short course radiotherapy with a prolonged interval to surgery for rectal cancer', Colorectal Disease, vol. 25, no. 1, pp. 24-30. https://doi.org/10.1111/codi.16315