The impact of conventional or hypofractionated radiotherapy on voice quality and oncological outcome in patients with early glottic cancer

  • Authors:
    • L. Di Nicola
    • G. L. Gravina
    • F. Marampon
    • P. Bonfili
    • S. Buonopane
    • M. Di Staso
    • C. Festuccia
    • P. Franzese
    • M. Tombolini
    • V. Tombolini
  • View Affiliations

  • Published online on: November 1, 2010     https://doi.org/10.3892/or_00000996
  • Pages: 1383-1388
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Abstract

The hypothesis being tested in this study is that hypofractionated radiotherapy is well tolerated and not lower in terms of oncological outcome than conventional radiotherapy. Forty patients with histologically proven glottic cancer were included in the analysis. Twenty-two were treated by hypofractionated radiotherapy (3D-HFRT) (25 fractions of 2.4 Gy delivered daily to a total dose of 60 Gy). This group was retrospectively compared to 18 subjects who met the same inclusion criteria and who were treated with conventional radiotherapy (3D-CRT) (33 fractions of 2 Gy delivered daily to a total dose of 66 Gy). One year after RT treatment in 10 patients (5 in the arm-1 and 5 in the arm-2) mild dysphonia persisted. The other patients achieved a complete recovery of the overall quality of voice with no significant difference documented between the two groups. At 3 years the local control rate was 100% for the patients treated with hypofractionated radiotherapy and 96% for the patients treated with conventional regimen. The statistical analysis did not show any significant difference in local control between the two groups (p=0.45). No significant acute and late toxicity was documented in both groups. Subjects with early glottic cancer seem to experience comparable levels of morbidity irrespective whether they were treated by hypofractionated or conventional conformal therapy without any worsening of the tumor local control. Thus, we provide clinical evidence to justify trends already emerging toward hypofractionated regimens in early glottic cancer.

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November 2010
Volume 24 Issue 5

Print ISSN: 1021-335X
Online ISSN:1791-2431

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Spandidos Publications style
Di Nicola L, Gravina GL, Marampon F, Bonfili P, Buonopane S, Di Staso M, Festuccia C, Franzese P, Tombolini M, Tombolini V, Tombolini V, et al: The impact of conventional or hypofractionated radiotherapy on voice quality and oncological outcome in patients with early glottic cancer . Oncol Rep 24: 1383-1388, 2010
APA
Di Nicola, L., Gravina, G.L., Marampon, F., Bonfili, P., Buonopane, S., Di Staso, M. ... Tombolini, V. (2010). The impact of conventional or hypofractionated radiotherapy on voice quality and oncological outcome in patients with early glottic cancer . Oncology Reports, 24, 1383-1388. https://doi.org/10.3892/or_00000996
MLA
Di Nicola, L., Gravina, G. L., Marampon, F., Bonfili, P., Buonopane, S., Di Staso, M., Festuccia, C., Franzese, P., Tombolini, M., Tombolini, V."The impact of conventional or hypofractionated radiotherapy on voice quality and oncological outcome in patients with early glottic cancer ". Oncology Reports 24.5 (2010): 1383-1388.
Chicago
Di Nicola, L., Gravina, G. L., Marampon, F., Bonfili, P., Buonopane, S., Di Staso, M., Festuccia, C., Franzese, P., Tombolini, M., Tombolini, V."The impact of conventional or hypofractionated radiotherapy on voice quality and oncological outcome in patients with early glottic cancer ". Oncology Reports 24, no. 5 (2010): 1383-1388. https://doi.org/10.3892/or_00000996