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Role of Radiotherapy in Pancreatic Cancer

by Madhumathi Palaniappan on May 8, 2017 at 5:54 PM
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Highlights:

Pancreatic cancer patients can live longer if they receive radiotherapy at a high dose, finds a new study presented at the European Society for Radiotherapy and Oncology.


The cancer of the pancreas is difficult to treat and also has the lowest survival rates. It has already known that around 33,8000 people who die every year. Pancreatic cancer has a high mortality rate because of the limited symptoms that make it difficult to diagnose and is also capable of spreading easily.

‘High dose of radiotherapy could help to improve survival among pancreatic cancer patients.’

Previous research studies has suggested radiotherapy be of little help to pancreatic cancer patients. However, when given at a higher dose it may have a role to play.

Research Study
The research study analyzed the data of 514 patients from Europe and the US. These patients were diagnosed when their tumors had not spread and could also be removed by the surgery.

Patients were given chemotherapy that was combined along with radiotherapy following a surgery and was followed for an average of 20 months.

The research team divided the patients into four groups, based on the dose of radiation that they received.

Study Findings
The findings of the study revealed that higher the dose of the radiation, the longer the patient lived.

Radiation dose is measured in terms of grays (Gy) which is found to be equivalent to absorbing one joule of radiation therapy per kilogram of the body tissue.

The research study was also presented by Dr Francesco Cellini, radiation oncologist at the Fondazione Policlinico Universitario Agostino Gemelli and the Universita Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Rome, Italy.

Dr. Francesco Cellini said, "Survival rates for pancreatic cancer remain stubbornly low, with most patients given months rather than years to live."

"Previous research has not shown a benefit for treating pancreatic cancer with radiotherapy, suggesting that these tumors are somehow resistant to radiation, but this study suggests the situation is more nuanced. We have found that the higher the dose, the longer the patient is likely to survive. This may indicate that the doses were simply not high enough in previous research."

"The pattern of increasing survival in this study suggests that tumors of the pancreas are not resistant to radiation, they just need to be tackled with an adequate dose."

Dr Cellini added, "Even in developed countries, perhaps only a quarter of patients are picked up early enough to have their tumors surgically removed. Although their survival chances are better, the majority still do not survive beyond a few years."

For patients with early stage tumors, surgery could be a treatment which is followed by chemotherapy and radiotherapy. However, in later-stage disease, patients are treated with chemotherapy and may be combined with palliative radiotherapy as the disease progresses.

Dr Cellini said, "Radiotherapy has benefited from a number of technological improvements over recent years and it is becoming easier to give higher doses that are targeted to the tumor area. This study suggests radiotherapy should be considered for patients with early stage pancreatic cancer. It may also be worthwhile to investigate whether current radiotherapy techniques could also bring survival benefits to patients with more advanced tumors."

The research team is now studying the high-dose radiotherapy that is combined along with chemotherapy to treat pancreatic cancer before surgery.

Professor Yolande Lievens, head of the department of radiation oncology at Ghent University Hospital, Belgium, President of ESTRO said, "This is an interesting study which raises questions about the role that radiotherapy could play in extending the lives of people diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. In this grim disease, radiotherapy has not been shown to have an impact on survival, but the current study suggests the doses previously tested may have been too low to do so.

Radiotherapy has evolved and improved considerably over recent years, allowing us to deliver higher doses without increasing side effects, and, for cancer with such poor survival rates, all promising new options should be explored."



Source: Medindia

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