Abstract | PURPOSE: Rectal toxicity is often dose limiting during pelvic radiation therapy. This prospective study examined the sequential development and associations of clinical, endoscopic, and histopathologic rectal toxicity during ongoing radiation therapy. METHODS AND MATERIALS: Thirty-three patients with nongastrointestinal pelvic carcinomas underwent proctoscopy with biopsy before radiation therapy, after 2 weeks treatment, and toward the end of the treatment course (6 weeks). Symptoms of acute toxicity were recorded, and endoscopic changes were graded. Histologic changes in the surface epithelium, glandular layer, and lamina propria were assessed using an ad hoc scoring system. Macrophage accumulation was evaluated in anti-CD68 stained sections. RESULTS: Pretreatment endoscopy and biopsies were unremarkable. Clinical symptoms progressed toward the end of the treatment course. In contrast, endoscopic pathology was maximal at 2 weeks. Biopsies obtained during treatment exhibited atrophy of the surface epithelium, acute cryptitis, crypt abscesses, crypt distortion and atrophy, and stromal inflammation. Histologic changes, particularly those in the surface epithelium, were consistently more pronounced at 2 weeks than they were at 6 weeks. CONCLUSION: In contrast to clinical symptoms, endoscopic changes stabilize and histologic changes regress from the 2nd to the 6th week of treatment. These results may have implications for the design and timing of prophylactic and therapeutic interventions to reduce radiation proctitis.
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Authors | N Hovdenak, L F Fajardo, M Hauer-Jensen |
Journal | International journal of radiation oncology, biology, physics
(Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys)
Vol. 48
Issue 4
Pg. 1111-7
(Nov 01 2000)
ISSN: 0360-3016 [Print] United States |
PMID | 11072170
(Publication Type: Journal Article)
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Topics |
- Acute Disease
- Biopsy
- Female
- Humans
- Male
- Pelvic Neoplasms
(radiotherapy)
- Proctitis
(etiology, pathology)
- Proctoscopy
- Prospective Studies
- Radiation Injuries
(complications, pathology)
- Rectum
(pathology, radiation effects)
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