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1.
Chinese Journal of Radiation Oncology ; (6): 169-173, 2023.
Article in Chinese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-993169

ABSTRACT

With the aging of population, the elderly (≥65 years old) cancer patients have become one of the main populations for cancer care. For inoperable locally advanced head and neck squamous carcinomas, cisplatin-based concurrent chemoradiotherapy is the first-line choice. Several large clinical studies have shown that patients under 70 years of age can still benefit from concurrent chemoradiotherapy, while it should be cautious to apply chemotherapy to patients aged 70-80 years. For elderly patients who are intolerant to cisplatin, carboplatin or other regimens with less gastrointestinal and renal toxicity should be considered. Although anti-epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) monoclonal antibodies combined with radiotherapy has been proved to be more effective than radiotherapy alone in total patient population, age-subgroup analysis showed limited benefit in elderly patients. The safety of immune checkpoint inhibitors in elderly patients has been validated and those with high programmed death ligand-1 (PD-L1) expression may benefit from concurrent or neoadjuvant immunotherapy, however, high-level evidence is still lacking. For patients older than 80 years, radiotherapy alone may be superior to concurrent chemoradiotherapy, and hypofractionated radiotherapy for palliative purposes can be safely used in this population.

2.
Chinese Journal of Radiation Oncology ; (6): 569-573, 2022.
Article in Chinese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-932707

ABSTRACT

Radiotherapy is an essential part of comprehensive treatment, as well as a radical treatment for head and neck cancer (HNC). The COVID-19 has continued so far, imposing a great impact on cancer care. Since conventional fractionated radiotherapy (CFRT, 2 Gy/F) requires as long as more than six weeks of treatment time, a huge challenge for epidemic control is created for both hospitals and patients. Hypofractionated radiotherapy (Hypo-RT) may be more suitable than CFRT for patients during pandemic by increasing the fraction size, thus reducing fraction number and treatment duration. Early studies have explored the application of Hypo-RT in HNC in palliative setting, which partially proved its safety and effectiveness. Recently, the efforts have been made in definitive treatment using hypofractionated regimen, as well as its combination with systemic treatment and immunotherapy. Indeed, regarding the pandemic of COVID-19, Hypo-RT has been recommended by several expert consensus in the HNC. In this review, relevant research progress was summarized and clinical implication of Hypo-RT in COVID-19 pandemic era was discussed.

3.
Chinese Journal of Radiation Oncology ; (6): 1055-1058, 2022.
Article in Chinese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-956953

ABSTRACT

Nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) is a common head and neck malignant tumor with high incidence in southern China. Local recurrence is one of the main failure modes of locally advanced NPC. The dose-escalation after radical radiotherapy for locally advanced NPC remains controversial. In the era of modern radiotherapy, the mainstream treatment mode of locally advanced NPC is neoadjuvant chemotherapy plus concurrent chemoradiotherapy. There is no consensus on whether to prescribe dose-escalation, how and when to conduct dose-escalation, how much dose to prescribe for patients with residual lesion proved by MRI or pathology. How to accurately determine the target volume and dose / fraction to maximize the local control of the tumor are the directions of clinical practice for locally advanced NPC, which remain to be further studied.

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