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癌症患者报告的治疗后皮肤反应因种族而异,而非因治疗或期望不同而有所差异。

Post-treatment skin reactions reported by cancer patients differ by race, not by treatment or expectations.

作者信息

Ryan J L, Bole C, Hickok J T, Figueroa-Moseley C, Colman L, Khanna R C, Pentland A P, Morrow G R

机构信息

Department of Dermatology, University of Rochester School of Medicine & Dentistry, James P Wilmot Cancer Center, Rochester, NY 14642, USA.

出版信息

Br J Cancer. 2007 Jul 2;97(1):14-21. doi: 10.1038/sj.bjc.6603842. Epub 2007 Jun 12.

Abstract

Cancer patients may experience skin problems while undergoing chemotherapy and radiation therapy. Frequency of skin reactions may be influenced by skin pigmentation and psychological factors. A Symptom Inventory completed by 656 cancer patients nationwide before and after chemotherapy, radiation therapy, or chemotherapy plus radiation therapy was analysed to determine if treatment type, race (Black vs White), and pretreatment expectations influenced post-treatment skin reactions. Subsequent analysis of a local Symptom Inventory completed weekly for 5 weeks by 308 patients receiving radiation therapy examined severity of reported skin reactions. Significantly more patients receiving radiation therapy had stronger expectations of skin problems (62%) than patients receiving chemotherapy (40%, P=0.001) or chemotherapy plus radiation therapy (45%, P=0.003). Overall, expectations did not correlate with patient reported post-treatment skin problems in white (r=0.014, P=0.781) or black (r=0.021, P=0.936) patients. Although no significant difference was found between black and white patients in their pretreatment expectations of skin problems (P=0.32), black patients (10 out of 18, 56%) reported more skin problems than white patients (90 out of 393, 23%, P=0.001). Similarly, the local study showed that significantly more black patients (1 out of 5, 20%) reported severe skin reactions at the treatment site than white patients (12 out of 161, 8%). A direct correlation was observed between severity of skin problems and pain at the treatment site (r=0.541, P<0.001). Total radiation exposure did not significantly correlate with the report of skin problems at the treatment site for white or black patients. Overall, black patients reported more severe post-treatment skin problems than white patients. Our results suggest that symptom management for post-treatment skin reactions in cancer patients receiving radiation treatment could differ depending on their racial background.

摘要

癌症患者在接受化疗和放疗期间可能会出现皮肤问题。皮肤反应的频率可能受皮肤色素沉着和心理因素影响。对全国656名癌症患者在化疗、放疗或化疗加放疗前后填写的症状清单进行分析,以确定治疗类型、种族(黑人与白人)和治疗前预期是否会影响治疗后的皮肤反应。随后,对308名接受放疗的患者连续5周每周填写的局部症状清单进行分析,以检查所报告皮肤反应的严重程度。接受放疗的患者中,对皮肤问题有更强烈预期的患者(62%)明显多于接受化疗的患者(40%,P = 0.001)或接受化疗加放疗的患者(45%,P = 0.003)。总体而言,在白人(r = 0.014,P = 0.781)或黑人(r = 0.021,P = 0.936)患者中,预期与患者报告的治疗后皮肤问题不相关。虽然黑人与白人患者在治疗前对皮肤问题的预期没有显著差异(P = 0.32),但黑人患者(18人中有10人,56%)报告的皮肤问题比白人患者(393人中有90人,23%,P = 0.001)更多。同样,局部研究表明,报告治疗部位出现严重皮肤反应的黑人患者(5人中有1人,20%)明显多于白人患者(161人中有12人,8%)。观察到皮肤问题的严重程度与治疗部位的疼痛之间存在直接相关性(r = 0.541,P < 0.001)。白人或黑人患者的总辐射暴露量与治疗部位皮肤问题的报告没有显著相关性。总体而言,黑人患者报告的治疗后皮肤问题比白人患者更严重。我们的结果表明,接受放疗的癌症患者治疗后皮肤反应的症状管理可能因其种族背景而异。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/e7ec/2359663/4cc149ff5660/6603842f1.jpg

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