(1) Background: The goal of this study is to evaluate psychological tolerance and health-related quality of life (QOL) in head and neck (HN) cancer patients treated with definitive accelerated ...radiotherapy (DART). (2) Methods: 76 recurrence-free patients eligible for the study, who were treated with DART in the CAIR-2 phase III clinical study (median of follow-up = 47 months), completed EORTC QLQ-C30 with the H&N35 module, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) and Visual-Analog Scales (VAS) of pain in HN and the neck/arm areas. (3) Results: The most dominant symptoms measured with QLQ-C30 were as follows: fatigue (44/100), sleeplessness (39/100), financial problems (38/100) and pain (32/100). Within the H&N35, the highest scores were reported on the subscales of sticky saliva (60/100), mouth dryness (65/100) and increased intake of painkillers (50/100). Pain (VAS) was reported by 87% (HN area) and 78% (shoulder area) of the patients, with a mean score of 3/10. One-third of the patients reported depressive moods (HADS ≥ 15 points) with an average score of 12.5/42 p. The depressed group, who smoked more as compared to the non-depressed group before DART (96% vs. 78%) and required steroids treatment (85% vs. 58%) during DART, also scored significantly worse on 23 of the 35 subscales of QLQ-C30 and H&N35 and experienced more intense pain (VAS). Women and less-advanced patients scored better in several aspects of quality of life. (4) Conclusions: Patients treated with DART struggle with low quality of life and persistent treatment-related symptoms including constant pain. HNC survivors, especially those who are depressed, may require additional psychosocial, rehabilitation and medical intervention programmes.
Early detection of treatment failure may improve clinical outcome and overall survival in patients with head and neck cancer after first-line treatment. Circulating cell-free HPV16 DNA (cfHPV16 DNA) ...was evaluated as a possible complementary marker to radiological assessment of early response in patients with HPV-related oropharyngeal cancer (OPC) after radiotherapy alone or combined with chemotherapy.
The study included 66 patients with HPV-related OPC receiving radical radiotherapy alone or in combination with chemotherapy. cfHPV16 DNA was assessed in the blood of all patients before treatment using TaqMan-based qPCR. Subsequent analysis of cfHPV16 DNA was performed 12 weeks after treatment completion, along with radiological assessment of early treatment results.
Complete (CRR) and incomplete radiological response (IRR) was found in 43 (65%) and 23 (35%) patients respectively. cfHPV16 DNA was present in 5 (28%) patients with IRR, while only in 1 (4%) with CRR. Three of five patients with IRR that were positive for cfHPV16 DNA exhibited histopathologically confirmed local or regional treatment failure, and other two developed distant metastases. None of the patients with negative cfHPV16 DNA presented disease failure.
The post-treatment assessment of cfHPV16 DNA in patients with HPV-related OPC may be used as a complementary biomarker to conventional imaging-based examinations for early identification of treatment failure.
Purpose/Objective
: Our goal was to analyze the repopulation of surviving tumor cells during a treatment gap in radiotherapy for head-and-neck cancer.
Methods and Materials
: Clinical material is ...based on the records of 1502 patients treated by radiotherapy alone in Maria Sklodowska-Curie Memorial Institute in Gliwice during the period between1980 and 1989. All patients had histologically confirmed squamous cell carcinoma of the larynx or pharynx. The mean gap duration was 9 days. Only 10% of patients were treated without gaps. The dose per fraction was in the range of 1.5 to 2.5 Gy. Patient data were fitted directly to the mixed linear-quadratic model using maximum-likelihood estimation. Tumor stage or tumor localization was introduced into the equation as a categorical variable. Tumor proliferation was estimated by dividing the treatment gaps into three groups: the first 2 weeks, second 2 weeks, and the period after 4 weeks of irradiation.
Results
: Tumor control probability was significantly correlated with radiation dose, tumor progression (according to TNM), overall treatment time, and gap duration. Laryngeal cancers had a better prognosis than cancers of the oro- and nasopharynx. Significant tumor repopulation was found after the first 2 weeks of radiotherapy. During the treatment gap, the proliferation rate was equal to 0.75 Gy/day. During the days with irradiation, repopulation was slower and equal to 0.2 Gy/day.
Conclusion
: The repopulation of tumor cells is faster during a gap than during the normal days of irradiation. Accelerated repopulation probably starts soon after 2 weeks of irradiation.
To evaluate severity of acute mucosal reactions (AMR) caused by conventional (CF) and accelerated fractionation (AF) regimens using a modified Dische system and to analyze differences in incidence ...and severity of AMR according to frequency and regularity of scoring.
Sixty-six consecutive patients (33 CF, 33 AF) with head and neck cancer irradiated with 5 fractions in 5 days per week (CF) or with 7 fractions in 7 days (AF) to a total dose of 70 Gy. A modified Dische system was used for daily quantitation of AMR during radiotherapy until complete healing.
Confluent mucositis (CM) was noted in 79% of patients in the CF group and 85% in the AF group. In 24% of the CF group and 18% of the AF group the CM presented a wave-like pattern. In 55% of CF and 67% of AF a classic triphasic pattern was noted. In 12 patients acute reactions did not transgress the level of spotted mucositis. The present study clearly shows that quantitation of the incidence and severity of acute mucosal effects strongly depends on frequent and regular scoring. A significant difference in the incidence of CM between the CF and AF groups was noted, mainly in weeks 4-6 of irradiation. When once-weekly irregular instead of daily scoring was evaluated, the incidence of CM was underestimated by approximately 20-36%.
Acute mucosal reactions occur as a complex of morphologic and functional disorders with individual intensity, even among patients treated with the same fractionation regimen. In some cases they present a "wave-like" pattern during irradiation. Therefore, precise quantitation of acute effects requires regular and frequent scoring.
To report long-term results of randomized trial comparing 2 accelerated fractionations of definitive radiation therapy assessing the need to irradiate during weekend in patients with head and neck ...squamous cell carcinoma.
A total of 345 patients with SCC of the oral cavity, larynx, and oro- or hypo-pharynx, stage T2-4N0-1M0, were randomized to receive continuous accelerated irradiation (CAIR: once per day, 7 days per week) or concomitant accelerated boost (CB: once per day, 3 days per week, and twice per day, 2 days per week). Total dose ranged from 66.6-72 Gy, dose per fraction was 1.8 Gy, number of fractions ranged from 37-40 fractions, and overall treatment time ranged from 37-40 days.
No differences for all trial end-points were noted. At 5 and 10 years, the actuarial rates of local-regional control were 63% and 60% for CAIR vs 65% and 60% for CB, and the corresponding overall survival were 40% and 25% vs 44% and 25%, respectively. Confluent mucositis was the main acute toxicity, with an incidence of 89% in CAIR and 86% in CB patients. The 5-year rate of grade 3-4 late radiation morbidity was 6% for both regimens.
Results of this trial indicate that the effects of accelerated fractionation can be achieve by delivering twice-per-day irradiation on weekday(s). This trial has also confirmed that an accelerated, 6-weeks schedule is a reasonable option for patients with intermediate-stage head-and-neck squamous cell carcinoma because of the associated high cure rate and minimal severe late toxicity.
The study aimed to detect features of human serum proteome that were associated with exposure to ionizing radiation. The analyzed group consisted of 46 patients treated with radical radiotherapy for ...larynx cancer; patients were irradiated with total doses in a range from 51 to 72 Gy. Three consecutive blood samples were collected from each patient: before the start, 2 weeks after the start, and 4-6 weeks after the end of radiotherapy. The low-molecular-weight fraction of the serum proteome (2,000-13,000 Da) was analyzed by the MALDI-ToF mass spectrometry. Proteome profiles of serum samples collected before the start of radiotherapy and during the early stage of the treatment were similar. In marked contrast, mass profiles of serum samples collected several weeks after the end of the treatment revealed clear changes. We found that 41 out of 312 registered peptide ions changed their abundance significantly when serum samples collected after the final irradiation were compared with samples collected at the two earlier time points. We also found that abundances of certain serum peptides were associated with total doses of radiation received by patients. The results of this pilot study indicate that features of serum proteome analyzed by mass spectrometry have potential applicability as a retrospective marker of exposure to ionizing radiation.
HPV-positive cancer is strongly immunogenic tumor which induces cell type response in surrounding microenvironment. Systemic inflammation is generally accompanied by cancer disease and it weakens ...cell response and negatively influences organism reaction to cancer
The aim of present study was to compare laboratory parameters of the immune system: leukocyte count (WBC), neutrophil count (Neut) and lymphocyte count (Lym), monocyte count (Mono), C-reactive protein (CRP), Interleukine 6 (Il-6), in patients with HPV-positive and HPV-negative OPC.
75 patients were treated with curative intent with radiotherapy alone (32 %) or combined with platinum-based chemotherapy (68%). There were 47% patients with T1/2 and 53% with T3/4 of primary tumor stage and 44% and 56% of patients with N0 and N+ nodal stage disease, respectively. Complete blood counts (CBC), C-reactive protein (CRP) and Il-6 were estimated in blood or serum before and after the treatment. HPV DNA was determined in plasma by QPCR method.
In patients with HPV-negative OPC WBC count (p=0,006 median: 6,88 vs 5,69), Lym count (p=0,02 median: 1,96 vs 1,49) and CRP (p=0,0001 median: 5,88 vs 1,35 mg/dl) was higher than for HPV-positive OPC before treatment. Additionally, in patients with HPV-negative OPC WBC count (p=0,03 median: 5,53 vs 4,17), Lym count (p=0,02 median: 0,69 vs 0,44), Mono count (p=0,003 median: 0,58 vs 0,43) and Il-6 (p=0,05 median: 25,53 vs 11,65 pg/ml) was higher than for HPV-positive OPC after therapy. Before treatment significantly longer overall survival (OS) for patients with low WBC count (p=0,001)(Fig.1), low concentration of CRP (p=0,0001) (Fig. 2) and Il-6 (p=0,01) was also found.
Inflammation processes are more severe in HPV-negative OPC. Low levels of inflammatory indicators like WBC count, Lym count, CRP, Il-6 may be associated with longer OS in this group of patients. Systemic inflammation reflects host reaction on cancer, characterized by a significant weakness of cellular immunity. It is more characteristic for patients with HPV–negative OPC
A population study is reported in which the DNA damage induced by g-radiation (2 Gy) and the kinetics of the subsequent repair were estimated by the comet and micronucleus assays in isolated ...lymphocytes of 82 healthy donors and patients with head and neck cancer before radiotherapy. The parameters of background and radiation-induced DNA damage, rate of repair, and residual non-repaired damage were measured by comet assay, and the repair kinetics for every donor were computer-fitted to an exponential curve. The level of background DNA damage before irradiation measured by comet assay as well as the level of micronuclei were significantly higher in the head and neck cancer patient group than in the healthy donors, while the parameters of repair were widely scattered in both groups. Cancer patient group contained significantly more individuals, whose irradiated lymphocytes showed high DNA damage, low repair rate and high non-repaired DNA damage level. Lymphocytes of donors belonging to this subgroup showed significantly lower inhibition of cell cycle after irradiation.
The paper aims to show the multilevel and complex cooperation and the inclusion of the psychotherapist leading the psychotherapy in the medical team at the radiotherapy and clinical oncology clinic. ...We illustrate these interventions with the case of Stan. This 43‐year‐old firefighter was diagnosed with advanced head and neck cancer and pre‐existing mental health problems meeting the criteria of ICD‐10: obsessive‐compulsive disorder, post‐traumatic stress disorder and psychoactive substance abuse. During the treatment, suicidal thoughts and impulses emerged, triggered at the hospital by electronic noises and the feeling of entrapment without a way out. This situation put the patient at high risk and the whole healthcare team needed an urgent effective response. The patient agreed to stay in the secured room, where he was cared for by doctors, nurses, a dietitian, and a psychotherapist. He actively attended daily sessions with noticeable engagement. Psychotherapy sessions focused on alleviating posttraumatic stress disorder and OCD. Mindfulness and breathwork‐based exercises were implemented to increase non‐judgemental self‐awareness and regulate the over‐aroused nervous system. As a result, the patient's mental health has improved and the completion of the cancer treatment was possible. Psychotherapy, good therapeutic alliance, and attentive teamwork effectively managed his mental health and treatment‐related symptoms.