Palliative radiotherapy for esophageal and gastric cancer : population-based patterns of utilization and outcomes in Ontario, Canada

Article

MERCHANT, Shaila J. | KONG, Weidong | MAHMUD, Aamer | BOOTH, Christopher M. | HANNA, Timothy P.

Objective: Patients with incurable esophageal and gastric cancer may develop local symptoms for which palliative radiotherapy (PRT) may be considered. We sought to evaluate patterns in utilization and outcomes of patients receiving PRT for incurable esophageal and gastric cancer in Ontario, Canada using health administrative data. Methods: Linked health administrative databases were used to identify patients receiving PRT for incurable esophageal and gastric cancer. Primary outcomes were utilization and delivery of PRT, utilization of endoscopic dilation with or without stent insertion after completion of PRT and survival from 1) date of diagnosis and 2) start of PRT. Results: We identified 2500 patients who received PRT. Mean age was 70 ± 13 years and the majority (75%, n = 1873/2500) were male. Over half of the patients had a diagnosis of gastric cancer (58%, n = 1453/2500) and began PRT within 6 months of cancer diagnosis (85%, n = 2125/2500). Of the 2500 patients in the cohort, 2174 patients received EBRT with few receiving brachytherapy (n = 326) or EBRT and brachytherapy combined (n = 88). Over the study period, there was an increase in the number of patients receiving PRT (136 in 2007 to 290 in 2016), as well as in the use of advanced conformal radiotherapy techniques. Only 5% (115/2500) required dilation with or without stent insertion after completion of PRT. Median overall and cancer-specific survival of the cohort was 205 days and 209 days from date of diagnosis and 108 days and 110 days from start of PRT. Conclusions: PRT is an important treatment for patients with incurable esophageal and gastric cancer who present with local symptoms. Utilization of PRT and advanced EBRT techniques increased over the study period. Few patients require endoscopic dilation with or without stent insertion after completion of PRT suggesting that PRT provides favorable symptom control.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/08258597211072946

Voir la revue «JOURNAL OF PALLIATIVE CARE, 38»

Autres numéros de la revue «JOURNAL OF PALLIATIVE CARE»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Palliative radiotherapy for esophageal and ga...

Article indépendant | MERCHANT, Shaila J. | JOURNAL OF PALLIATIVE CARE | n°2 | vol.38

Objective: Patients with incurable esophageal and gastric cancer may develop local symptoms for which palliative radiotherapy (PRT) may be considered. We sought to evaluate patterns in utilization and outcomes of patients receivin...

Palliative radiotherapy for esophageal and ga...

Article indépendant | MERCHANT, Shaila J. | JOURNAL OF PALLIATIVE CARE | n°2 | vol.38

Objective: Patients with incurable esophageal and gastric cancer may develop local symptoms for which palliative radiotherapy (PRT) may be considered. We sought to evaluate patterns in utilization and outcomes of patients receivin...

First-line palliative chemotherapy for esopha...

Article | MERCHANT, Shaila J. | JCO oncology practice

PURPOSE: Clinical trials have shown that palliative chemotherapy (PC) improves survival in patients with incurable esophageal and gastric cancer; however, outcomes achieved in routine practice are unknown. We describe treatment pa...

De la même série

The Chinese version of the palliative nursing...

Article | LIU, Qingwei | JOURNAL OF PALLIATIVE CARE | n°1 | vol.39

Background: Nurses play an important role in palliative care, and high-quality assessment tools can help standardize palliative-related nursing behaviors, but there are no such tools in China. Objective: This study aimed to revise...

African American recruitment in early heart f...

Article | STOCKDILL, Macy L. | JOURNAL OF PALLIATIVE CARE | n°1 | vol.38

BACKGROUND: Palliative care trial recruitment of African Americans (AAs) is a formidable research challenge. OBJECTIVES: Examine AA clinical trial recruitment and enrollment in a palliative care randomized controlled trial (RCT) f...

Food as love : ethical and moral dilemmas in ...

Article | NEWCOMER, Kelley Finch | JOURNAL OF PALLIATIVE CARE | n°4 | vol.38

Supportive Palliative Care and Hospice professionals frequently attend to Minimally Conscious State (MCS) patients near the end of life and in so doing, face decisions over maintenance or withdrawal of artificial nutrition and hyd...

Revision and validation of the Chinese versio...

Article | ZHANG, Ting-Ting | JOURNAL OF PALLIATIVE CARE | n°1 | vol.38

Background: Hospice care for end-of-life patients in the ICU should focus on quality of life. Currently, there are no specific quality-of-life measures for ICU end-of-life patients in China. Objective: The aim of this study was to...

Prevalence and predictors of palliative care ...

Article | JACKSON, Inimfon | JOURNAL OF PALLIATIVE CARE | n°2 | vol.38

Objective: Research has shown that palliative care improves the quality of life of cancer patients; however, there is no literature on specific factors that predict its use in diffuse large b-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) patients. Theref...

Chargement des enrichissements...