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Palliative splenic irradiation in primary and post PV/ET myelofibrosis: outcomes and toxicity of three radiation schedules

Splenectomy and splenic irradiation (SI) are the sole treatment modalities to control drug resistant splenomegaly in patients with myelofibrosis (MF). SI has been used in poor surgical candidates but optimal total dose and fractionation are unclear. We retrospectively reviewed 14 MF patients with sy...

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Autores principales: Federico, Mario, Pagnucco, Guido, Russo, Antonio, Cardinale, Giovanni, Guerrieri, Patrizia, Sciumè, Francesco, Symonds, Catherine, Cito, Letizia, Siragusa, Sergio, Gebbia, Nicola, Lagalla, Roberto, Midiri, Massimo, Giordano, Antonio, Montemaggi, Paolo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: PAGEPress Publications 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3222239/
http://dx.doi.org/10.4081/hr.2009.e7
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author Federico, Mario
Pagnucco, Guido
Russo, Antonio
Cardinale, Giovanni
Guerrieri, Patrizia
Sciumè, Francesco
Symonds, Catherine
Cito, Letizia
Siragusa, Sergio
Gebbia, Nicola
Lagalla, Roberto
Midiri, Massimo
Giordano, Antonio
Montemaggi, Paolo
author_facet Federico, Mario
Pagnucco, Guido
Russo, Antonio
Cardinale, Giovanni
Guerrieri, Patrizia
Sciumè, Francesco
Symonds, Catherine
Cito, Letizia
Siragusa, Sergio
Gebbia, Nicola
Lagalla, Roberto
Midiri, Massimo
Giordano, Antonio
Montemaggi, Paolo
author_sort Federico, Mario
collection PubMed
description Splenectomy and splenic irradiation (SI) are the sole treatment modalities to control drug resistant splenomegaly in patients with myelofibrosis (MF). SI has been used in poor surgical candidates but optimal total dose and fractionation are unclear. We retrospectively reviewed 14 MF patients with symptomatic splenomegaly. Patients received a median of 10 fractions in two weeks. Fraction size ranged from 0.2–1.4 Gy, and total dose varied from 2–10.8 Gy per RT course. Overall results indicate that 81.8% of radiation courses achieved a significant spleen reduction. Splenic pain relief and gastrointestinal symptoms reduction were obtained in 94% and 91% of courses, respectively. Severe cytopenias occurred in 13% of radiation courses. Furthermore patients were divided in three groups according to the radiation dose they received: 6 patients in the low-dose group (LDG) received a normalized dose of 1.67 Gy; 4 patients in the intermediate-dose group (IDG) received a normalized dose 4.37 Gy; the remaining 4 patients in the high-dose group (HDG) received a normalized dose of 9.2 Gy. Subgroup analysis showed that if no differences in terms of treatment efficacy were seen among dose groups, hematologic toxicity rates distributed differently. Severe cytopenias occurred in 50% of courses in the HDG, and in the 14.3% and in 0% of the IDG and LDG, respectively. Spleen reduction and pain relief lasted for a median of 5.5 months in all groups. Due to the efficacy and tolerability of the low-dose irradiation 4 patients from the LDG and IDG were retreated and received on the whole 12 RT courses. Multiple retreatments did not show decremental trends in terms of rates of response to radiation nor in terms of duration of clinical response. Moreover, retreatment courses did not cause an increased rate of adverse effects and none of the retreated patients experienced severe hematologic toxicities. The average time of clinical benefit in retreated patients was much longer (21 months, range 44–10) than patients who were not retreated (5.75 months, range 3–6).
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spelling pubmed-32222392011-12-19 Palliative splenic irradiation in primary and post PV/ET myelofibrosis: outcomes and toxicity of three radiation schedules Federico, Mario Pagnucco, Guido Russo, Antonio Cardinale, Giovanni Guerrieri, Patrizia Sciumè, Francesco Symonds, Catherine Cito, Letizia Siragusa, Sergio Gebbia, Nicola Lagalla, Roberto Midiri, Massimo Giordano, Antonio Montemaggi, Paolo Hematol Rev Article Splenectomy and splenic irradiation (SI) are the sole treatment modalities to control drug resistant splenomegaly in patients with myelofibrosis (MF). SI has been used in poor surgical candidates but optimal total dose and fractionation are unclear. We retrospectively reviewed 14 MF patients with symptomatic splenomegaly. Patients received a median of 10 fractions in two weeks. Fraction size ranged from 0.2–1.4 Gy, and total dose varied from 2–10.8 Gy per RT course. Overall results indicate that 81.8% of radiation courses achieved a significant spleen reduction. Splenic pain relief and gastrointestinal symptoms reduction were obtained in 94% and 91% of courses, respectively. Severe cytopenias occurred in 13% of radiation courses. Furthermore patients were divided in three groups according to the radiation dose they received: 6 patients in the low-dose group (LDG) received a normalized dose of 1.67 Gy; 4 patients in the intermediate-dose group (IDG) received a normalized dose 4.37 Gy; the remaining 4 patients in the high-dose group (HDG) received a normalized dose of 9.2 Gy. Subgroup analysis showed that if no differences in terms of treatment efficacy were seen among dose groups, hematologic toxicity rates distributed differently. Severe cytopenias occurred in 50% of courses in the HDG, and in the 14.3% and in 0% of the IDG and LDG, respectively. Spleen reduction and pain relief lasted for a median of 5.5 months in all groups. Due to the efficacy and tolerability of the low-dose irradiation 4 patients from the LDG and IDG were retreated and received on the whole 12 RT courses. Multiple retreatments did not show decremental trends in terms of rates of response to radiation nor in terms of duration of clinical response. Moreover, retreatment courses did not cause an increased rate of adverse effects and none of the retreated patients experienced severe hematologic toxicities. The average time of clinical benefit in retreated patients was much longer (21 months, range 44–10) than patients who were not retreated (5.75 months, range 3–6). PAGEPress Publications 2009-05-04 /pmc/articles/PMC3222239/ http://dx.doi.org/10.4081/hr.2009.e7 Text en ©Copyright M. Federico et al., 2009 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License (by-nc 3.0) Licensee PAGEPress, Italy
spellingShingle Article
Federico, Mario
Pagnucco, Guido
Russo, Antonio
Cardinale, Giovanni
Guerrieri, Patrizia
Sciumè, Francesco
Symonds, Catherine
Cito, Letizia
Siragusa, Sergio
Gebbia, Nicola
Lagalla, Roberto
Midiri, Massimo
Giordano, Antonio
Montemaggi, Paolo
Palliative splenic irradiation in primary and post PV/ET myelofibrosis: outcomes and toxicity of three radiation schedules
title Palliative splenic irradiation in primary and post PV/ET myelofibrosis: outcomes and toxicity of three radiation schedules
title_full Palliative splenic irradiation in primary and post PV/ET myelofibrosis: outcomes and toxicity of three radiation schedules
title_fullStr Palliative splenic irradiation in primary and post PV/ET myelofibrosis: outcomes and toxicity of three radiation schedules
title_full_unstemmed Palliative splenic irradiation in primary and post PV/ET myelofibrosis: outcomes and toxicity of three radiation schedules
title_short Palliative splenic irradiation in primary and post PV/ET myelofibrosis: outcomes and toxicity of three radiation schedules
title_sort palliative splenic irradiation in primary and post pv/et myelofibrosis: outcomes and toxicity of three radiation schedules
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3222239/
http://dx.doi.org/10.4081/hr.2009.e7
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