An ultrasonographic monitoring of skin condition in patients receiving radiotherapy for head and neck cancers |
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Authors: | Jakub Pazdrowski,Aleksandra Da czak‐Pazdrowska,Adriana Pola ska,Joanna Ka
mierska,Wojciech Barczak,Mateusz Szewczyk,Pawe Golusi ski,Zygmunt Adamski,Ryszard aba,Wojciech Golusi ski |
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Affiliation: | Jakub Pazdrowski,Aleksandra Dańczak‐Pazdrowska,Adriana Polańska,Joanna Kaźmierska,Wojciech Barczak,Mateusz Szewczyk,Paweł Golusiński,Zygmunt Adamski,Ryszard Żaba,Wojciech Golusiński |
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Abstract: | Radiodermatitis is one of the commonest side effects of radiotherapy. They are usually assessed by semi‐quantitative clinical scores, which are not validated and may be subject to inter‐observer variability. A few previous studies suggested that high‐frequency ultrasonography (HF‐USG) is useful in the assessment of the acute phase of radiation dermatitis in breast cancer patients. (a) To monitor skin changes by HF‐USG during the course of radiotherapy due to head and neck cancers, and (b) to determine whether there is any connection between skin sonograms and the skin scoring criteria. This prospective, observational study includes patients diagnosed with head and neck cancers, treated with radiotherapy or concomitant chemoradiation. The final analysis includes six patients. In every patient, the HF‐USG as well as dermatological assessment (target lesion score—TLS and CACE v. 4.0) were performed 4×: before, in the middle, day after, and 3 months after radiotherapy. There were significant differences between non‐irradiated skin thickness and thickness of skin with clinically obvious radiodermatitis (TLS grade 1‐4; P < .0001), as well as between irradiated, unchanged skin thickness (TLS grade 0) and thickness of skin with clinically obvious radiodermatitis (TLS grade 1‐4; P = .0002). There was no significant difference between non‐irradiated and irradiated, unchanged skin thickness (TLS grade 0; P = .9318). In four patients, we demonstrated subepidermal low echogenic band (SLEB). HF‐USG can be useful tool to noninvasive and objective assessment of skin changes during radiotherapy. |
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Keywords: | head and neck cancers HF‐USG high‐frequency ultrasonography radiodermatitis |
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