Abstract

Little is known about patient-reported quality of life (QOL) before and after radiotherapy (RT) for early keratinocyte carcinoma (KC). The present study tested the hypothesis that QOL is hypothesized to deteriorate soon after RT, with subsequent improvement of a magnitude similar to other KC treatments. This observational study assessed prospectively collected longitudinal patient-reported QOL data at a single center. Patients undergoing external beam RT for early-stage (T0-2, <4 cm) KC that completed the Skindex-16 (S16) or Skin Cancer Index (SCI) before and at least once after RT were included. These indices include subscales of symptoms, emotions, and functioning for S16 and emotional, social, and appearance for SCI. 81 patients (median age 79 years) were treated for early KC, most being basal cell carcinomas (87%) on the face (80%) an average of 1.3 cm in diameter. Composite S16 scores and total SCI scores showed significant, clinically meaningful improvements at 3 months and 6 weeks after RT, respectively. QOL declined at 6 weeks after treatment on the S16 symptoms subscale. Concurrently, S16 and SCI emotional subscales significantly improved, and this trend persisted for 2+ years. Improvements in S16 functioning and SCI social and appearance QOL occurred after RT. The magnitude of improvement in QOL 3-12 months after RT was comparable to what has been previously reported after other types of KC treatments, like surgery. QOL related to symptoms deteriorates during the first 6 weeks after RT for early KC, but it improves by 3 months. QOL related to emotions, functioning, social, and appearance all improve after RT. These changes in QOL are similar to those observed after other treatments of early KC.

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