Abstract

Background and purposeNeoadjuvant chemoradiation (nCRT) followed by surgery is considered curative intent treatment for patients with resectable esophageal cancer. The aim was to establish hemodynamic aspects of changes in heart volume and to explore whether changes in heart volume resulted in clinically relevant changes in the dose distribution of radiotherapy. MethodsA prospective study was conducted in patients who were treated with nCRT consisting of carboplatin and paclitaxel concomitant with radiotherapy (41.4Gy/1.8Gy per fraction). Physical parameters, cardiac volume on CT and Cone beam CT, cardiac blood markers and cardiac ultrasound were obtained. ResultsIn 23 patients a significant decrease of 55.3ml in heart volume was detected (95% CI 36.7–73.8ml, p<0.001). There was a decrease in both systolic (mean decrease 18mmHg, 95% CI 11–26mmHg, p<0.001) and diastolic blood pressure (mean decrease 8mmHg, 95% CI 2–14mmHg, p=0.008) and an increase in heart rate with 6beats/min (95% CI 1–11beats/min, p=0.021). Except for Troponin T, no change in other cardiac markers and echocardiography parameters were observed. The change in heart volume did not result in a clinically relevant change in radiation dose distribution. ConclusionHeart volume was significantly reduced, but was not accompanied by overt cardiac dysfunction. All observed changes in hemodynamic parameters are consistent with volume depletion. Adaptation of the treatment plan during the course of radiotherapy is not advocated.

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