Department of Radiation Oncology, Rajiv Gandhi Cancer Institute and Research Centre, New Delhi, India.
Department of Infectious Diseases, Rajiv Gandhi Cancer Institute and Research Centre, New Delhi, India.
Asian Pac J Cancer Prev. 2022 Jul 1;23(7):2415-2420. doi: 10.31557/APJCP.2022.23.7.2415.
To analyze the impact of treatment delay caused by COVID-19 infection on patients scheduled for radiotherapy treatment.
In this descriptive study, we analyzed all patients who were COVID-19 positive during the scheduled radiotherapy course, those who had an infection while on neoadjuvant treatment period, or during surgery before the start of radiation. The study period was from June 2020 to May 2021. A treatment delay was defined as a delay in starting the radiation treatment, a gap during their scheduled radiation treatment, or treatment discontinuation. All patients who had a treatment delay were followed-up till November 2021.
The median follow-up time of the study was 13 months. Ninety-four patients were selected for the study who met the inclusion criteria. Seventy-seven patients had a mild COVID-19 infection, while 17 had a moderate to severe illness. Of the entire cohort, 83 patients had a treatment delay. The median treatment delay (MTD) in days was 18 (6 to 47). Amongst those who had a treatment delay, 66 patients were treated with curative intent, of which 51 patients are on follow-up - 34 patients are disease-free (MTD - 18.5, 10 to 43), seven had either a residual disease or locoregional recurrence (MTD - 22, 10 to 32), seven had distant metastasis (MTD - 18, 15 to 47), and three patients died (MTD - 20, 8 to 27). Of three patients who died, only one died of COVID-19-related causes.
Even though the mortality due to COVID-19 infection among those who underwent radiotherapy was low, a treatment delay might have caused adverse treatment outcomes. Longer follow-up of these patients is required to further establish this. It will remain debatable whether it was worth delaying radiotherapy for mild to moderate COVID-19 infection for a significant time to cause a potential cancer treatment failure.
分析因 COVID-19 感染而导致的治疗延迟对计划接受放疗的患者的影响。
在这项描述性研究中,我们分析了所有在预定放疗过程中 COVID-19 检测呈阳性的患者、在新辅助治疗期间或在开始放疗前手术期间感染的患者。研究期间为 2020 年 6 月至 2021 年 5 月。治疗延迟定义为开始放疗的延迟、计划放疗期间的间隔或治疗中断。所有发生治疗延迟的患者均随访至 2021 年 11 月。
本研究的中位随访时间为 13 个月。符合纳入标准的 94 名患者被选入研究。77 例患者患有轻度 COVID-19 感染,17 例患者患有中重度疾病。在整个队列中,83 例患者发生了治疗延迟。延迟的中位治疗时间(MTD)为 18 天(6 至 47 天)。在发生治疗延迟的患者中,66 例患者接受了治愈性治疗,其中 51 例患者正在接受随访 - 34 例患者无疾病(MTD - 18.5,10 至 43),7 例患者有残留疾病或局部区域复发(MTD - 22,10 至 32),7 例患者有远处转移(MTD - 18,15 至 47),3 例患者死亡(MTD - 20,8 至 27)。在 3 例死亡患者中,只有 1 例死于 COVID-19 相关原因。
尽管接受放疗的患者因 COVID-19 感染导致的死亡率较低,但治疗延迟可能导致不良的治疗结果。需要对这些患者进行更长时间的随访,以进一步证实这一点。是否值得为轻度至中度 COVID-19 感染而延迟显著时间的放疗以导致潜在的癌症治疗失败,这仍存在争议。