Prospective evaluation of patient-reported quality-of-life outcomes following SBRT ± cetuximab for locally-recurrent, previously-irradiated head and neck cancer.
Publication/Presentation Date
7-1-2012
Abstract
PURPOSE: Stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) has emerged as a promising salvage strategy for unresectable, previously-irradiated recurrent squamous cell carcinomas of the head and neck (rSCCHN). Here-in, we report the first prospective evaluation of patient-reported quality-of-life (PR-QoL) following re-irradiation with SBRT±cetuximab for rSCCHN.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: From November 2004 to May 2011, 150 patients with unresectable, rSCCHN in a previously-irradiated field receiving >40 Gy were treated with SBRT to 40-50 Gy in 5 fractions ± concurrent cetuximab. PR-QoL was prospectively acquired using the University of Washington Quality-of-Life Revised (UW-QoL-R).
RESULTS: Overall PR-QoL, health-related PR-QoL, and select domains commonly affected by re-irradiation progressively increase following an initial 1-month decline with statistically significant improvements noted in swallowing (p=0.025), speech (p=0.017), saliva (p=0.041), activity (p=0.032) and recreation (p=0.039).
CONCLUSIONS: Especially for patients surviving >1-year, improved tumor control associated with SBRT re-irradiation may ameliorate decreased PR-QoL resulting from rSCCHN. These improvements in PR-QoL transcend all measured domains in a validated PR-QoL assessment tool independent of age, use of cetuximab, tumor volume, and interval since prior irradiation.
Volume
104
Issue
1
First Page
91
Last Page
95
ISSN
1879-0887
Published In/Presented At
Vargo, J. A., Heron, D. E., Ferris, R. L., Rwigema, J. C., Wegner, R. E., Kalash, R., Ohr, J., Kubicek, G. J., & Burton, S. (2012). Prospective evaluation of patient-reported quality-of-life outcomes following SBRT ± cetuximab for locally-recurrent, previously-irradiated head and neck cancer. Radiotherapy and oncology : journal of the European Society for Therapeutic Radiology and Oncology, 104(1), 91–95. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.radonc.2012.04.020
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
22677037
Department(s)
Department of Surgery
Document Type
Article