Quality of life in patients with nasopharyngeal carcinoma receiving IMRT vs IMPT: a multicenter prospective longitudinal study.

Support Care Cancer

Department of Radiation Oncology, and Proton and Radiation Therapy Center, Chang Gung Medical Foundation, Linkou Chang Gung Memorial Hospital, Taoyuan, Taiwan, Republic of China.

Published: March 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) patients experience changes in symptom distress, depression, social support, and quality of life (QOL) during and after different types of radiation therapy (IMRT vs. IMPT).
  • It follows 121 NPC patients over various time points, identifying that symptom distress and depression peak during treatment but improve afterward, while QOL initially declines and then rises by the end of the study.
  • Key findings suggest that factors such as lower radiation dose, early cancer stage, and less symptom distress and depression significantly contribute to better QOL for patients, highlighting the need for tailored care during radiation therapy.

Article Abstract

Purpose: Nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) patients may experience symptom distress and depression during and after radiation therapy, which negatively impacts quality of life (QOL). We sought to identify trajectories of symptom distress, depression, social support, and QOL in patients with NPC receiving intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) vs intensity-modulated proton therapy (IMPT).

Methods: A multicenter prospective longitudinal study recruited NPC patients from two leading medical centers in Taiwan. The 121 NPC patients were followed from before RT (T0), at 4 weeks after beginning RT (T1), at 6 weeks of RT or the end of treatment (T2), and at 4 weeks post-RT (T3). Generalized estimating equation analysis was used to identify the factors related to QOL.

Results: Patients' symptom distress and depression increased from T0, peaked at T2, and decreased at T3. Physical-QOL and psychosocial-QOL decreased from T0 to T2, then increased by T3. Patients who had early-stage cancer, received a lower RT dose, had less symptom distress, and had less depression were more likely to have better QOL. Greater physical-QOL was associated with IMPT receipt, higher education level, early cancer stage, lower radiation dose, less symptom distress, and less depression. Patients who had good physical performance, received a lower radiation dose, had less symptom distress, and had less depression were more likely to have better psychosocial-QOL.

Conclusion: Radiation dose, symptom distress, and depression were the most important factors affecting QOL in patients with NPC. Understanding the factors associated with the trajectory of QOL can guide care during radiation treatment.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00520-024-08412-7DOI Listing

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