Impact of Late Treatment-Related Toxicity on Quality of Life Among Patients With Head and Neck Cancer Treated With Radiotherapy
JAJohannes A. LangendijkPDPatricia DoornaertIMIrma M. Verdonck‐de LeeuwCRC. René LeemansNKNeil K. Aaronson
University Medical Center Groningen
Indexed incrossrefpubmed
Abstract
Results
Of the six RTOG scales investigated, two significantly affected self-reported HRQoL, salivary gland (RTOG(xerostomia)) and esophagus/pharynx (RTOG(swallowing)). Although RTOG(xerostomia) was reported most frequently, HRQoL was most affected by RTOG(swallowing), particularly in the first 18 months after completion of radiotherapy.
Conclusion
Late radiation-induced toxicity, particularly RTOG(swallowing) and RTOG(xerostomia), has a significant impact on the more general dimensions of HRQoL. These findings suggest that the development of new radiation-induced delivery techniques should not only focus on reduction of the dose to the salivary glands, but also on anatomic structures that are involved in swallowing.
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Authors
6Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Medicine
- Swallowing
- Radiation therapy
- Head and neck cancer
- Quality of life (healthcare)
- Toxicity
- Multivariate analysis
- Cancer
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