Weppler Sarah, Quon Harvey, Schinkel Colleen, Yarschenko Adam, Barbera Lisa, Harjai Nabhya, Smith Wendy
Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada.
Department of Medical Physics, Tom Baker Cancer Centre, Calgary, AB, Canada.
Front Oncol. 2021 Oct 19;11:759724. doi: 10.3389/fonc.2021.759724. eCollection 2021.
To identify which patient-reported outcomes (PROs) may be most improved through adaptive radiation therapy (ART) with the goal of reducing toxicity incidence among head and neck cancer patients.
One hundred fifty-five head and neck cancer patients receiving radical VMAT (chemo)radiotherapy (66-70 Gy in 30-35 fractions) completed the MD Anderson Symptom Inventory, MD Anderson Dysphagia Inventory (MDADI), and Xerostomia Questionnaire while attending routine follow-up clinics between June-October 2019. Hierarchical clustering characterized symptom endorsement. Conventional statistical approaches indicated associations between dose and commonly reported symptoms. These associations, and the potential benefit of interfractional dose corrections, were further explored logistic regression.
Radiotherapy-related symptoms were commonly reported (dry mouth, difficulty swallowing/chewing). Clustering identified three patient subgroups reporting: none/mild symptoms for most items (60.6% of patients); moderate/severe symptoms affecting some aspects of general well-being (32.9%); and moderate/severe symptom reporting for most items (6.5%). Clusters of PRO items broadly consisted of acute toxicities, general well-being, and head and neck-specific symptoms (xerostomia, dysphagia). Dose-PRO relationships were strongest between delivered pharyngeal constrictor Dmean and patient-reported dysphagia, with MDADI composite scores (mean ± SD) of 25.7 ± 18.9 for patients with Dmean <50 Gy . 32.4 ± 17.1 with Dmean ≥50 Gy. Based on logistic regression models, during-treatment dose corrections back to planned values may confer ≥5% decrease in the absolute risk of self-reported physical dysphagia symptoms ≥1 year post-treatment in 1.2% of patients, with a ≥5% decrease in relative risk in 23.3% of patients.
Patient-reported dysphagia symptoms are strongly associated with delivered dose to the pharyngeal constrictor. Dysphagia-focused ART may provide the greatest toxicity benefit to head and neck cancer patients, and represent a potential new direction for ART, given that the existing ART literature has focused almost exclusively on xerostomia reduction.
确定哪些患者报告结局(PROs)通过适应性放射治疗(ART)可能得到最大改善,目标是降低头颈癌患者的毒性发生率。
155名头颈癌患者接受根治性容积调强弧形放疗(化疗)(66 - 70 Gy,分30 - 35次),在2019年6月至10月参加常规随访门诊时完成了MD安德森症状量表、MD安德森吞咽困难量表(MDADI)和口干问卷。分层聚类对症状认可情况进行了特征描述。传统统计方法表明剂量与常见报告症状之间存在关联。通过逻辑回归进一步探讨了这些关联以及分次剂量校正的潜在益处。
放疗相关症状常见(口干、吞咽/咀嚼困难)。聚类确定了三个患者亚组报告情况:大多数项目无/轻度症状(60.6%的患者);影响总体健康某些方面的中度/重度症状(32.9%);以及大多数项目为中度/重度症状报告(6.5%)。PRO项目聚类大致包括急性毒性、总体健康以及头颈特异性症状(口干、吞咽困难)。下咽缩肌平均剂量(Dmean)与患者报告的吞咽困难之间的剂量 - PRO关系最强,Dmean <50 Gy的患者MDADI综合评分(均值±标准差)为25.7±18.9,Dmean≥50 Gy的患者为32.4±17.1。基于逻辑回归模型,治疗期间将剂量校正回计划值可能使1.2%的患者在治疗后≥1年时自我报告的身体吞咽困难症状的绝对风险降低≥5%,23.3%的患者相对风险降低≥5%。
患者报告的吞咽困难症状与下咽缩肌所接受的剂量密切相关。鉴于现有ART文献几乎完全集中在减少口干方面,以吞咽困难为重点的ART可能为头颈癌患者带来最大的毒性获益,并代表了ART的一个潜在新方向。