Objectives: Pelvic malignancies form a large proportion of cancers in India. Radiotherapy is used frequently as a part of multimodality or definitive treatment and is associated with acute and chronic toxicities. The objectives were to assess the number and proportion of patients developing Grade 2 and above pelvic organ late toxicities after completion of therapeutic radiation, the factors associated with developing late toxicities, and patient-reported quality of life. Material and Methods: A total of 502 patients were recruited into this cross-sectional observational study, conducted at the Regional Cancer Centre, JIPMER, from June 2020 to June 2022. Patients were recruited after a minimum of 3 months and up to 5 years after completion of pelvic irradiation. The proportion and factors associated with the development of toxicities and the patient-reported quality of life (EORTC QLQ-c30) were also recorded in a single session, at the time of recruitment, after obtaining informed consent. CTCAE (v5.0) and RTOG grading were used to classify the toxicities. Results: Median follow-up assessment period was 36 months. The distribution of grade 2 and above pelvic organ toxicities was: chronic proctitis (19.1%), chronic cystitis (8.0%), subcutaneous fibrosis (18.1%), vaginal stenosis (14.5%), and pelvic insufficiency fractures (10.4%). Three patients had avascular necrosis of the femur, while another three had a second malignancy. 47.2% (95%CI = 42.8%-51.7%) of patients had at least one late pelvic toxicity. 79.7% of chronic visceral toxicities manifested within 3 years of completion of radiotherapy. Patients with grade 2 and above toxicities and disease relapse had poor scores on all functional quality of life scales. Conclusion: 47.2% of patients reported various grade 2 and above late pelvic organ toxicities. 8 (0.02%) patients developed grade 4 late pelvic toxicities. Factors consistently associated with chronic toxicities were BMI, hypertension, bulky disease, and lower vaginal disease. Diabetes, chemotherapy, and performance status were associated with pelvic insufficiency fractures.
Gokulanathan et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
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