Abstract

Oral mucositis is the dose-limiting toxicity of chemoradiation in oropharyngeal cancer patients, which can be minimized by giving constraints to oral mucosa. However, the constraints defined in literature are extrapolated from chemoradiation in head and neck cancers as a whole. This study aims to determine oral mucosa dose-volume parameters that can predict grade≥3 acute oral mucositis in oropharyngeal cancer patients treated with volumetric modulated arc radiotherapy. This prospective study was done in 52 patients of locally advanced oropharyngeal cancer treated with Volumetric modulated arc radiotherapy. Dose-volume histogram data were extracted and then acute oral mucosa toxicity was analysed. Receiver operating characteristic analysis and logistic regression were carried out to determine predictive factors for grade≥3 mucositis. Grade≥3 acute oral mucositis occurred in 57.6% (30/52) patients in the study. V30Gy>53.35% (P=0.005) was an independent dosimetric factor related to grade≥3 acute toxicity. In the receiver operating characteristic curve, the area under V30Gy was 0.770 (P=0.001); the cut-off value of V30 was 46.23% (sensitivity, 0.80; specificity, 0.91). Dose-volume histogram analysis predicts V30>53.35% as independent factors for grade≥3 acute oral mucositis in patients with oropharyngeal cancers treated with Volumetric modulated arc radiotherapy. Studies in future with more patient number can further validate the above results.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call