Radiotherapy for patients with Ledderhose disease: Long-term effects, side effects and patient-rated outcome.

Radiother Oncol

Department of Radiation Oncology, University Medical Centre Groningen, University of Groningen, The Netherlands. Electronic address:

Published: March 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examined the long-term effects of radiotherapy on patients with Ledderhose disease, focusing on pain reduction and quality of life after treatment.
  • A total of 67 patients participated, and results showed a significant decrease in pain scores from an average of 5.7 to 1.7 after radiotherapy, with most patients reporting satisfaction with the treatment.
  • The findings indicate that radiotherapy is effective, well tolerated, and has minimal long-term side effects, making patients' quality of life comparable to that of the general population.

Article Abstract

Background: The purpose of this study was to investigate the long-term effects of radiotherapy for patients with Ledderhose disease.

Methods: Questionnaires were sent to all patients with Ledderhose disease who had been treated with radiotherapy at our centre between 2008 and 2017 and who consented to participate. Radiotherapy was performed with orthovolt or electrons in two separate courses of five daily fractions of 3 Gy. The questionnaires addressed items such as pain from Ledderhose disease (Brief Pain Inventory), quality of life (EURO-QOL-5D-5L), long-term side effects, and patients' levels of satisfaction with the effect of treatment. Descriptive statistics and non-parametric tests were used to analyse the results.

Results: A total of 102 feet were irradiated in 67 patients (28 men, 39 women). Radiotherapy resulted in significant pain reduction: the mean pain score prior to radiotherapy, collected retrospectively, was 5.7 and 1.7 at time of assessment (p-value < 0.001). The following pain response scores were reported: progressive pain (0%), no change (22%; 22 feet), partial pain response (37%; 38 feet) and complete pain response (absence of pain) (41%; 42 feet). Seventy-eight percent of patients were satisfied with the treatment effect and 57% did not consider radiotherapy burdensome. The scores for societal perspective (0.856) and patients' perspective on quality of life (82.3) were each comparable to the reference values from the Dutch population in the same age category (0.857 and 80.6, respectively). The most commonly reported residual long-term side effect was dryness of the skin (n = 10; 15%).

Conclusion: Radiotherapy for Ledderhose disease results in long-term pain reduction in the majority of patients and has limited side effects. The treatment is well tolerated, patients feel satisfied, and quality of life is comparable to the reference population.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.radonc.2022.01.031DOI Listing

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