Background: Growing numbers of patients with cancer are surviving following treatment with pelvic radiotherapy. Eighty per cent will experience acute gastrointestinal (GI) toxicity during treatment and 50% will subsequently have a change in their bowel habit which will affect their quality of life. The main project in this thesis aims to determine whether delivery of a gastrointestinal bundle of care will decrease GI acute toxicity and late effects of pelvic chemoradiotherapy. Additional work in the thesis evaluated the newer technique of Volumetric Modulated Arc Therapy (VMAT) which delivers decreased dose to the organs at risk on planning scans. We aimed to determine outcomes of this technique in terms of patient-reported acute toxicity and late effects. There is no internationally accepted patient reported outcome measure to capture this toxicity data and this issue was addressed using Rasch analysis in a third project. Methods: A randomised controlled trial was performed. Patients who were scheduled to undergo potentially curative chemoradiotherapy for cervix and bladder cancers were recruited and randomised. The treatment group received dietetic input and if they developed lower GI symptoms they underwent investigations and treatment for bile acid malabsorption, small bowel bacterial overgrowth and lactose intolerance. The control group received standard care. Patients who were to undergo VMAT to treat gynaecological malignancy completed patient-reported outcomes at baseline, end of treatment and one year. The rates of patient-reported toxicity were compared with those of a historical cohort and were correlated with the volume of small bowel which was irradiated. Thirdly the technique of Rasch analysis was used to evaluate the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events derived patient reported outcome to measure pelvic toxicity of gynaecological cancer treatments. Results: It was feasible and acceptable to deliver a GI care bundle to patients undergoing chemotherapy and pelvic radiotherapy. All patients' data were available for analysis for the primary outcome and 29 patients' data were available at the 1 year time point. GI toxicity at 6 weeks was predicted by the trial group, suggesting that the intervention benefited the patients in terms of GI toxicity at 6 weeks. It is not yet clear whether this benefit is maintained at the 1 year time point. The frequencies of acute and late GI toxicity reported by patients undergoing VMAT were similar to that of a historical cohort who received conformal therapy. There was not a strong association between the volume of small bowel which was irradiated and the toxicity which was reported suggesting that other factors are involved in the development of toxicity. Rasch analysis of the pelvic symptom questionnaire demonstrated the main issue to be response dependency. When this was accounted for by grouping items into sub-tests the questionnaire could be made to be unidimensional and showed high reliability in a symptomatic population. Conclusion: GI intervention holds promise as a measure to reduce the acute toxicity and late effects of pelvic radiotherapy. Although newer radiotherapy techniques appear to decrease the dose delivered to the small bowel this does not translate to a reduction in patient-reported toxicity. The measurement of toxicity is complex and patient-reported outcome measures should be developed with techniques such as Rasch analysis to ensure meaningful data is available to guide further developments to reduce GI toxicity secondary to pelvic radiotherapy.
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:bl.uk/oai:ethos.bl.uk:740263 |
Date | January 2016 |
Creators | White, Katherine |
Contributors | Mclaughlin, John |
Publisher | University of Manchester |
Source Sets | Ethos UK |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Electronic Thesis or Dissertation |
Source | https://www.research.manchester.ac.uk/portal/en/theses/amelioration-and-assessment-of-gastrointestinal-acute-toxicity-and-late-effects-of-pelvic-radiotherapy(51f3a7e8-fd70-434f-ba15-6172a5aa4aca).html |
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