Abstract

BackgroundTobacco smoking may decrease the effectiveness of radiation therapy. This is because tobacco smoking can cause inflammation and damage to surrounding tissues, which may interfere with radiation delivery to the tumor. Our aim of this study is to investigate the effect of tobacco smoking use on complications in radiotherapy as a systematic review. MethodThe articles searched from the MEDLINE, PubMed, EMBASE, and Web of Science databases. The search terms used were “radiotherapy”, “outcome”, “radiation therapy”, “tobacco”, “smoking”, “complications”, “side effects”, “cancer”, and “malignancy”. PRISMA check list was used to assess the overall quality of evidence for each outcome. ResultThe outcomes of radiotherapy-inducing tobacco smoking in smokers are more than non-smokers including; high SPC (second primary cancer), decreased median overall survival, higher infections during treatment, increased fatigue (p = 0.027), increased pain (p = 0.009), poorer cognitive function (0.041), affected mouth opening (0.049), more speech disturbances (p = 0.017), higher metastasis risk (p = 0.031 and 0.019), higher locoregional recurrence risk (p = 0.027), oral mucositis (p = 0.03), mucositis severity related to higher tobacco exposure (p = 0.008), severe acute radiation skin reactions, and myocardial infarction. DiscussionTobacco smoking appears to be the most significant modifiable factor influencing cancer treatment outcomes. As such, healthcare providers should take detailed notes on patients' smoking histories during both routine and future clinical studies. Beyond immediate cessation, cancer patients should undertake comprehensive smoking cessation programs. These programs can significantly boost the efficacy of radiotherapy and enhance overall patient outcomes.

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