33 research outputs found

    Radiation Myelopathy Caused by Palliative Radiotherapy and Intrathecal Methotrexate

    Get PDF
    Radiation myelopathy is a rare, late-stage adverse event that develops following irradiation at or above 50 Gy. Here, we report a case of irreversible paraplegia caused by palliative radiation (20 Gy in 5 fractions) to the spinal cord combined with intrathecal methotrexate (IT-MTX). A 69-year-old man presented with back pain, prompting a diagnosis of acute myeloid leukemia. At the first visit, he complained of muscle weakness and hypoesthesia in both legs; spinal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed an epidural mass compressing the spinal cord at the fifth to seventh level of the thoracic vertebrae. This was considered to be an extramedullary lesion of leukemia, and he received remission induction therapy including IT-MTX; palliative radiation (20 Gy in 5 fractions) of the epidural mass was initiated the following day. Then, during the course of consolidation therapy, a second IT-MTX was performed after 1 month and a third after 3 months. While the consolidation therapy was complete, yielding remission, he developed sudden paraplegia, as well as bladder and bowel dysfunction (BBD), 10 months later. Spinal MRI showed extensive intramedullary high signal intensity on T2-weighted image, including the irradiation field. It was thought myelopathy was due to irradiation of the spinal cord combined with IT-MTX. He immediately received steroid pulse therapy; however, the paraplegia and BBD did not improve. It is extremely rare for irreversible radiation myelopathy to occur with IT-MTX and palliative radiation to the spinal cord. We believe that even with low-dose palliative radiation, caution is required for combined use with IT-MTX

    Prospective Study of Isolated Recurrent Tumor Re-irradiation With Carbon-Ion Beams

    Get PDF
    Purpose: To perform a prospective study to evaluate the efficacy and safety of isolated recurrent tumor re-irradiation with carbon-ion radiotherapy (RT).Methods and Materials: The inclusion criteria were clinically proven recurrent tumors, measurable by computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging, patients ≥ 16 years old, performance status scores between 0 and 2, isolated tumor at a previously irradiated site, and a life expectancy > 6 months. The exclusion criteria were tumor invasion into the gastrointestinal tract or a major blood vessel, uncontrolled infection, early recurrence (<3 months), and severe concomitant diseases. The primary end-point was the local control rate, the secondary end-points including the overall survival rate, and adverse events.Results: Between December 2013 and March 2016, 22 patients were enrolled in this prospective study. All patients were re-irradiated with carbon-ion RT with radical intent. Five patients had rectal cancer, 4 had sarcoma, 4 had lung cancer, 3 had hepatic cell carcinoma, and 6 had other tumors. The median follow-up time was 26 months. Eight patients developed local recurrence, and the 1- and 2-year local control rates were 71 and 60%, respectively. Eight patients died of their cancers and 2 died of other diseases. The 1- and 2-year overall survival rates were 76 and 67%, respectively. There were no grade 2 or higher acute adverse events and 4 patients (18%) developed grade 3 late adverse events. The group with the longer interval (>16 months) between the first RT and re-irradiation had significantly better outcomes than the shorter interval group (≤ 16 months).Conclusions: Re-irradiation, using carbon-ion RT with radical intent, had favorable local control and overall survival rates without severe toxicities for selected patients. Re-irradiation has the potential to improve clinical outcomes for isolated, local, recurrent tumors; further investigations are required to confirm the therapeutic efficacy

    Epigenetic Modification of Death Receptor Genes for TRAIL and TRAIL Resistance in Childhood B-Cell Precursor Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia

    No full text
    Immunotherapies specific for B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (BCP-ALL), such as anti-CD19 chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cells and blinatumomab, have dramatically improved the therapeutic outcome in refractory cases. In the anti-leukemic activity of those immunotherapies, TNF-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) on cytotoxic T-cells plays an essential role by inducing apoptosis of the target leukemia cells through its death receptors (DR4 and DR5). Since there are CpG islands in the promoter regions, hypermethylation of the DR4 and DR5 genes may be involved in resistance of leukemia cells to immunotherapies due to TRAIL-resistance. We analyzed the DR4 and DR5 methylation status in 32 BCP-ALL cell lines by sequencing their bisulfite PCR products with a next-generation sequencer. The DR4 and DR5 methylation status was significantly associated with the gene and cell-surface expression levels and the TRAIL-sensitivities. In the clinical samples at diagnosis (459 cases in the NOPHO study), both DR4 and DR5 genes were unmethylated in the majority of cases, whereas methylated in several cases with dic(9;20), MLL-rearrangement, and hypodiploidy, suggesting that evaluation of methylation status of the DR4 and DR5 genes might be clinically informative to predict efficacy of immunotherapy in certain cases with such unfavorable karyotypes. These observations provide an epigenetic rational for clinical efficacy of immunotherapy in the vast majority of BCP-ALL cases

    Damage to sebaceous gland and the efficacy of moisturizer after whole breast radiotherapy: a randomized controlled trial

    No full text
    Abstract Background We conducted a randomized trial to evaluate the efficacy of heparinoid moisturization for radiation dermatitis. We report the time-course of sebum content after whole breast radiotherapy (WBRT) and the efficacy of heparinoid moisturizer. Methods Patients receiving adjuvant breast RT were randomly assigned into three groups; prophylaxis, post-WBRT and control groups. Patients used moisturizer on the irradiated breast from the beginning of RT in the prophylaxis group, 2 weeks post-RT in the post-WBRT group, and no moisturizer in the control group. Sebum content of the irradiated and non-irradiated breast was measured to assess sebaceous gland damage. Sebum composition was also analyzed. Results A total of 76 patients were analyzed; 30 in the post-WBRT group, 32 in the control group, 14 in the prophylaxis group. The sebum content in the irradiated breast significantly decreased after WBRT in the post-WBRT and control groups. The decrease was sustained in the control group. In the non-irradiated breast, sebum content also decreased after WBRT in the post-WBRT and control groups. After moisturizer application, sebum content by sebumeter returned to pre-RT level in the post-WBRT group, while the decrease was sustained in the control group. Sebum content measured by evaporative light scattering detector and sebumeter was similar in the control group, but the dissociation was observed after moisturizer application in the post-WBRT group. The proportion of wax esters decreased in the irradiated breast after WBRT. Conclusions Radiotherapy significantly reduced sebum content in both irradiated and non-irradiated breast, indicating that RT caused quantifiably persistent sebaceous gland damage in irradiated sites and the surrounding tissue. Combined with the results from our previous study, heparinoid moisturizer treatment effectively prevents water loss by retaining oil contents on the skin surface. Trial registration UMIN, UMIN000005532. Registered 1 April 2011

    Results of a nationwide survey on Japanese clinical practice in breast-conserving radiotherapy for breast cancer

    Get PDF
    The Breast Cancer Group of the Japanese Radiation Oncology Study Group conducted a nationwide questionnaire survey on the clinical practice of postoperative radiotherapy for breast-conserving treatment for breast cancer. This questionnaire consisted of 18 questions pertaining to the annual number of treated patients, planning method, contouring structure, field design, dose-fractionated regimen, application of hypofractionated radiotherapy, boost irradiation, radiotherapy for synchronously bilateral breast cancer, and accelerated partial breast irradiation. The web-based questionnaire had responses from 293 Japanese hospitals. The results indicated the following: treatment planning is performed using relatively similar field designs and delivery methods; the field-in-field technique is used at more than one-third of institutes; the commonest criteria for boost irradiation is based on the surgical margin width (≤5 mm) and the second commonest criteria was age (≤40 or ≤50 years), although some facilities applied a different age criterion (>70 years) for omitting a tumor bed boost; for conventional fractionation, almost all institutes delivered 50 Gy in 25 fractions to the conserved whole breast and 10 Gy in 5 fractions to the tumor bed. This survey revealed that 43% of hospitals offered hypofractionated radiotherapy, and the most common regimens were 42.56 Gy in 16 fractions for whole-breast irradiation and 10.64 Gy in 4 fractions for boost irradiation. Almost all of the facilities irradiated both breasts simultaneously for synchronously bilateral breast cancer, and accelerated partial breast irradiation was rarely offered in Japan. This survey provided an overview of the current clinical practice of radiotherapy for breast-conserving treatment of breast cancer in Japan

    The efficacy of radiation therapy using the Quad Shot regimen in cutaneous metastasis from parotid gland cancer: A case report

    No full text
    Key Clinical Message Cutaneous metastasis from malignant tumors can cause symptoms such as exudates, bleeding, and pain, which remarkably reduce patient's quality of life. Herein, we report a case in which radiation therapy using the Quad Shot regimen was effective in the treatment of cutaneous metastasis from parotid gland cancer
    corecore