Abstract

The aim of this study was to investigate the impacts of radiation therapy (RT) on the occurrence risk of secondary bladder cancer (SBC) and on the patients’ survival outcome after being diagnosed with gynecological cancer (EC). The data were obtained from the SEER database between 1973 and 2015. Chi-squared test was used to compare the clinicopathological characteristics among the different groups. Fine and Gray’s competing risk model was used to assess the cumulative incidence and occurrence risk of SBC in GC survivors. Kaplan–Meier method was utilized for survival analysis. A total of 123,476 GC patients were included, among which 31,847 (25.8%) patients received RT while 91,629 (74.2%) patients did not. The cumulative incidence of SBC was 1.59% or 0.73% among patients who had received prior GC-specific RT or not, respectively. All EBRT (standardized incidence ratio (SIR) = 2.49, 95% CI [2.17-2.86]), brachytherapy (SIR =1.96, 95% CI [1.60-2.38]), and combinational RT modality groups (SIR =2.73, 95% CI [2.24-3.28]) had dramatically higher SBC incidence as compared to the US general population. Receiving EBRT (HR = 2.83, 95% CI [2.34–3.43]), brachytherapy (HR = 2.17, 95% CI [1.67–2.82]), and combinational RT modality (HR = 2.97, 95% CI [2.34-3.77]) were independent risk factors for SBC development. Survival detriment was observed in SBC patients who received RT after GC diagnosis, as compared to those who did not receive RT. In conclusion, patients who underwent RT after GC had an increased risk of developing bladder as a secondary primary cancer. A long-term surveillance for SBC occurrence is necessary for GC patients who have received prior RT.

Highlights

  • Over the past 100 years, radiation therapy has been successfully used as adjuvant treatment modality for the management of gynecological malignancies thought to be at high risk of recurrence [1,2,3]

  • Considering the early and late toxicities associated with radiation therapy (RT), the objective of the current study was to evaluate the impact of RT on the risk of secondary bladder cancer (SBC) development in gynecological cancer (GC) survivors and the prognosis of GC patients who suffered with SBC, using the SEER database

  • The current data showed that the cumulative incidence of SBC among GC patients who underwent prior RT was significantly higher than patients who did not receive RT

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Summary

Introduction

Over the past 100 years, radiation therapy has been successfully used as adjuvant treatment modality for the management of gynecological malignancies thought to be at high risk of recurrence [1,2,3]. By depositing high physical energy of radiation on pelvic lymph-node regions, postoperative radiation therapy (RT) can effectively treat possible micro-metastasis disease and reduce tumor recurrence. It is anticipated that radiotherapy will continue to be an integral component in the treatment of endometrial, cervical, vaginal, vulvar, as well as some selected epithelial ovarian cancers [4]. Radiotherapy is deemed as a double-edged sword. One of the most serious late side effects is the increased risk of occurring a radiation-induced second primary malignancy [6,7,8]

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