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Palliative Radiotherapy

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There should be urgent (within 24 hours) access to and availability of radiotherapy and simulator facilities in daytime sessions, 7 days a week for patients with MSCC ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Palliative Radiotherapy


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Palliative Radiotherapy
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the active total care of patients whosedisease
is not responsive to curative treatment . WHO
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About 30-45 of patients receiving radiotherapy
are palliative
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GOALS OF PALLIATIVE RT
  • control symptoms
  • enhance quality of life
  • optimize the patients limited remaining time
  • guided by basic ethical principles and clinical
    based evidence

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EMERGENCY INDICATIONS
  • Spinal cord compression
  • Haemorrhage/bleeding
  • Superior Vena caval obstruction
  • Seizures/ Fitting

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INDICATIONS
  • Pain relief from bone mets.
  • Prevention of pathological
  • Spinal cord compression.
  • Impending or actual obstruction hollow viscera.
  • Brain mets.
  • Control of Haemorrhage.
  • Control of ulceration/ fungation.

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Fraction
  • A single treatment session
  • Conventionally 1.8 2.0 Gy

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Hypofractionation
  • Fewer fractions than conventional
  • Higher dose per fraction
  • Shorter treatment time
  • Increased probability of late effects
  • Decreased radiotherapy waiting times

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Hypofractionation
  • clinical evidence suggests that shorter
    fractionation schedules compared to more
    protracted schedules have the same effectiveness
    in symptom control of incurable cancer patients,
    particularly, for metastatic bone pain and
    multiple brain metastases.

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Bony Metastases
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Bony mets can cause
  • Pain
  • Pathological fracture
  • Spinal cord compression
  • Hypercalcemia
  • Leading to debilitation and impaired quality of
    life

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  • External beam radiation provides significant
    relief in 50-80 of patients and complete pain
    relief in 30 of patients (ASTRO)

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Factors affecting choice of fractionation regimen
  • Performance status
  • Prognosis
  • Risk for fracture or cord compression
  • Site to be treated

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  • A literature review confirms similar rates of
    pain control using a single fraction versus a
    multiple fractions (50-85). There are however
    higher retreatment rates for single fraction
    regimens.

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Fractionation regimens
  • 8 Gy in 1 fraction
  • 20 Gy in 5 fractions
  • 30 Gy in 10 fractions
  • 24 Gy in 6 fractions
  • Endpoints using pain relief, narcotic relief and
    quality of life measures show consistent
    similarity in the regimens

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  • The frequency and severity of side effects
    especially mucosal are a more of a function of
    radiation planning than radiotherapy dose

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BRAIN METASTASES
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Comparison of median survival in 7 studies using
the recursive partitioning analyses (RPA) classes
(treatment was WBRT with or without local
measures, none of the studies is limited to one
particular cancer type).
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Clinical Recommendations of DEGRO
Breast Care (Basel). 2010 5(6) 401407.
Published online 2010 December 8.
doi 10.1159/000322661
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  • Analysis of all included patients, SRS plus
    WBRT, did not show a survival benefit over WBRT
    alone. However, performance status and local
    control were significantly better in the SRS plus
    WBRT group. Furthermore, significantly longer OS
    was reported in the combined treatment group for
    RPA Class I patients as well as patients with
    single metastasis.

Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2010 Jun
16(6)CD006121. Whole brain radiation therapy
(WBRT) alone versus WBRT and radiosurgery for the
treatment of brain metastases
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  • conventional fractionation can be used to avoid
    late neurotoxicity
  • dexamethasone is the corticosteroid of choice for
    cerebral edema
  • anticonvulsants should not be prescribed
    prophylactically

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Spinal cord compression
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  • Inform patients at high risk of developing bone
    metastases, patients with diagnosed bone
    metastases, or patients with cancer who present
    with spinal pain about the symptoms of MSCC
  • (NICE)

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Patients with cancer and any of the following
symptoms suggestive of spinal metastases should
seek medical attention immediately for assessment
pain in the middle (thoracic) or upper
(cervical) spine progressive lower (lumbar)
spinal pain severe unremitting lower spinal
pain spinal pain aggravated by straining (for
example, at stool, or when coughing or sneezing)
localized spinal tenderness nocturnal
spinal pain preventing sleep
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  • Patient should be nursed flat with neutral spine
    alignment (including log rolling with use of a
    bed pan for toilet) until bony and neurological
    stability are ensured and cautious remobilisation
    may begin

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  • For patients with MSCC, once any spinal shock has
    settled and neurology is stable, carry out close
    monitoring and interval assessment during gradual
    sitting from supine to 60 degrees over a period
    of 34 hours

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  • Offer conventional analgesia (including NSAIDs,
    non-opiate and opiate medication) as required to
    patients with painful spinal metastases in
    escalating doses as described by the WHO
    three-step pain relief ladder

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  • Offer patients with vertebral involvement from
    myeloma or breast cancer bisphosphonates to
    reduce pain and the risk of vertebral
    fracture/collapse

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  • Unless contraindicated (including a significant
    suspicion of lymphoma) offer all patients with
    MSCC a loading dose of at least 16 mg of
    dexamethasone as soon as possible after
    assessment, followed by a short course of 16 mg
    dexamethasone daily while treatment is being
    planned

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  • If surgery is appropriate in patients with MSCC,
    attempt to achieve both spinal cord decompression
    and durable spinal column stability
  • Patients with MSCC who have been completely
    paraplegic or tetraplegic for more than 24 hours
    should only be offered surgery if spinal
    stabilisation is required for pain relief

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  • There should be urgent (within 24 hours) access
    to and availability of radiotherapy and simulator
    facilities in daytime sessions, 7 days a week for
    patients with MSCC requiring definitive treatment
    or who are unsuitable for surgery

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Fractionation regimens
  • 8 Gy in 1 fraction
  • 20 Gy in 5 fractions
  • 30 Gy in 10 fractions
  • 24 Gy in 6 fractions

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Palliative radiotherapy a slice of the palliative
pie
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Palliative radiotherapy should be aimed as a one
stop approach
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Factors affecting utilization of palliative
radiotherapy services
  • Poor performance status
  • Short predicted life expectancy
  • Access to radiotherapy centres
  • Limited oncology training of attending physicians
  • Waiting time for radiotherapy

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