Abstract

Abdominal or pelvic radiotherapy in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) patients raises concerns regarding the risk of worsening of underlying disease. To assess the impact of radiotherapy on IBD course. A retrospective multicentre study including IBD patients exposed to abdominal or pelvic irradiation was conducted, retrieving IBD activity by semester (6-month periods) before (from S-4 to S-1) and after (from S+1 to S+6) radiotherapy and IBD flare during follow-up. Sixty-one patients (32 women, mean age 59years), with 467 patient semesters of follow-up, treated for digestive (n=31), urinary tract (n=23) and gynaecological cancers (n=7) were included. Rates of IBD activity per semester were, respectively, 21% (95% CI: 16-27) from S-4 to S-1; 12% (7-19) from S+1 to S+3 (P=0.15 vs S-4 to S-1) and 16% (10-25) from S+4 to S+6 (P=0.45 vs S-4 to S-1). With a median follow-up of 156 weeks (interquartile range: 82-365), rates of survival without IBD flare at 1 and 3years after radiotherapy were 82.5% (73.2-93.0) and 70.6% (58.8-84.7). Moderate-to-severe acute radiotherapy-induced gut toxicity and the absence of concomitant chemotherapy were independently associated with an increased risk of flare. Most patients with non-active IBD can be safely treated with abdominal or pelvic radiotherapy. Patients having acute gut toxicity and those without concomitant chemotherapy should be more closely monitored in the post-radiotherapy period.

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