• J Pain Symptom Manage · Feb 2021

    A Retrospective Study of Rapid Symptom Response in Bleeding Gynecologic Malignancies with Short Course Palliative Radiation Therapy: Less is More.

    • Anish A Butala, Daniel Y Lee, Roshal R Patel, Nawar A Latif, Ashley F Haggerty, Ima Paydar, Joshua A Jones, and Neil K Taunk.
    • Department of Radiation Oncology, Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
    • J Pain Symptom Manage. 2021 Feb 1; 61 (2): 377-383.e2.

    ContextAdvanced gynecologic malignancies can cause significant vaginal bleeding. Radiotherapy (RT) is often used to palliate symptoms, but limited data exist concerning the optimal dose and expected time to bleeding hemostasis in this population.Objectives1) To investigate the overall hemostasis response and kinetics of hemostasis in women with gynecologic malignancies receiving palliative RT. 2) To compare the efficacy of short-course RT (SCRT, less than or equal to five fractions, >3.5 Gy per fraction) vs. conventionally fractionated long-course regimens (greater than five fractions).MethodsWe identified women receiving palliative RT for bleeding gynecologic malignancies. Initial and maximal hemostasis responses (IHR and MHR) were recorded and categorized as progressive bleeding (PD), stable disease (SD), partial response (PR), or complete response (CR). Clinical variables were correlated with response or toxicity using binary logistic regression statistical methods.ResultsThirty-three women (median age 63) were identified between 2010 and 2019. Median follow-up and survival after RT were 131 days. About 54.5% (18 of 33) received SCRT. Median time to IHR was five days (two-and-a-half days with SCRT) and 78.8% (26 of 33) responded during treatment. Median time to MHR was 13 days. About 100% achieved PR or CR at MHR. Rates of CR were similar between SCRT (83%) and conventionally fractionated schedules (87%). Average durability of hemostatic control was 5.4 months. Overall rate of rebleeding and Grade 3+ toxicity was 9.1% (3 of 33 each).ConclusionWomen receiving SCRT for bleeding gynecologic malignancies achieved rapid symptom control (often during treatment) with minimal rebleeding. In a population whose median survival is four months, SCRT effectively addresses symptomatic disease while minimizing patient burden and toxicity.Copyright © 2020 American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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