首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 46 毫秒
1.
PURPOSE: To evaluate tongue hemiatrophy as a late effect of brachytherapy, a new grading system was designed and applied to patients who had received low dose rate (LDR) or high dose rate (HDR) brachytherapy for early tongue cancer. METHODS AND MATERIALS: Between December 1998 and April 1999, 49 patients who had received brachytherapy for early tongue cancer (T1/T2=22:27) at Osaka University Hospital were investigated. All patients had undergone either LDR or HDR brachytherapy with Ir-192 (LDR/HDR=30:19) between 1980 and 1998. Atrophic changes in their tongue were classified into four categories (G0-G3): G3, not able to protrude the tongue beyond incisors; G2, hemiatrophy is seen on the irradiated side in the resting position of the tongue; G1, deviation of the tip of the tongue to the irradiated side is seen when protruded; and G0, none of these signs. The relationship between tongue hemiatrophy and tumor factors, treatment factors, and patients' functional impairment was then investigated. The median time from treatment to assessment was 75 months (range 8-219 months). Volume index was defined as the number of needles that were implanted vertically into the tongue. RESULTS: Fourteen patients were classified as G0, 29 as G1, five as G2, and one as G3. None of the G0 patients showed any speech or swallowing dysfunction, pain or contracted feeling, or general dissatisfaction with post-treatment tongue status. There was a tendency for such problems to increase with the tongue hemiatrophy grade. The frequency of T2 and non-superficial type tumors also tended to increase with the tongue hemiatrophy grade. The volume index of the G2-3 hemiatrophy group was significantly larger than that of the G0-1 group (P=0.041). CONCLUSION: This new grading system makes evaluation of atrophic changes in the tongue after brachytherapy easy and effective.  相似文献   

2.
: Oral tongue carcinomas are highly curable with radiotherapy. In the past, patients with tongue carcinoma have usually been treated with low dose rate (LDR) interstitial radiation. This Phase III study was designed to compare the treatment results obtained with LDR with those obtained with high dose rate (HDR) interstitial radiotherapy for tongue carcinoma.

: The criteria for patient selection for the Phase III study were: (a) presence of a T1T2N0 tumor that could be treated with single-plane implantation, (b) localization of tumor at the lateral tongue border, (c) tumor thickness of 10 mm or less, (d) performance status between O and 3, and (e) absence of any severe concurrent disease. From April 1992 through December 1993, 15 patients in the LDR group (70 Gy/4 to 9 days) and 14 patients in the HDR group (60 Gy/10 fractions/6 days) were accrued. The time interval between two fractions of the HDR brachytherapy was more than 6 h.

: Local recurrence occurred in two patients treated with LDR brachytherapy but in none of the patients treated with HDR. One- and 2-year local control rates for patients in the LDR group were both 86%, compared with 100% in the HDR group (p = 0.157). There were four patients with nodal metastasis in the LDR group and three in the HDR group. Local recurrence occurred in two of the four patients with nodal metastases in the LDR group. One- and 2-year nodal control rates for patients in LDR group are were 85, compared with 79% in the HDR group.

: HDR fractionated interstitial brachytherapy can be an alternative to traditional LDR brachytherapy for early tongue cancer and eliminate the radiation exposure for medical staffs.  相似文献   


3.
From January 1963 through December 1979, 103 patients with Stage T1N0 and T2N0 squamous cell carcinomas of the oral tongue were treated with definitive radiotherapy. The primary was Stage T1 in 18 patients and T2 in 85 patients. Therapy to the primary consisted of interstitial therapy only in 18 patients, 16-37 Gy in 2.4-4.0 Gy fractions followed by interstitial therapy to doses of 38-55 Gy in 31 patients, external therapy of 40-50 Gy with interstitial therapy of 20-40 Gy in 46 patients, and external beam only to doses of 45-82 Gy in 8 patients. Follow-up ranged from 2 to 290 months (median 159 months). Five of the 8 patients treated with external therapy alone and 6 of the 18 patients treated with interstitial therapy failed at the primary site. In those patients treated with a combination of external and interstitial therapy the 2-year local control rate was 92% for patients treated with external therapy to doses of less than 40 Gy combined with a moderately high dose of brachytherapy, compared with 65% for patients who received external therapy to doses of greater than or equal to 40 Gy with lower brachytherapy doses (p = .01). Conversely the risk of failure in the neck was directly related to the dose delivered by external beam therapy. In field recurrence occurred in 44% of patients receiving no therapy to the neck. 27% in those receiving less than 40 Gy, and 11% in those patients with neck treatment to greater than or equal to 40 Gy. Eleven of 87 (13%) of patients who were at risk for complications for greater than or equal to 24 months developed severe complications; severe complications were more likely to occur in the group who received most of their therapy with external beam irradiation. These data show that a high dose of interstitial therapy is necessary to secure optimum local control of early primary tongue cancer. Because of the high frequency of moderate to severe late complications in this series we have adopted a policy of initial surgery for most oral tongue cancers with postoperative radiotherapy if indicated by pathological features predictive of a high rate of local-regional failure.  相似文献   

4.
Our purpose is to analyse local control, complications relative to the proportion of total dose delivered by external beam irradiation versus interstitial implant in 147 patients with previously untreated T2N0 squamous cell carcinoma of the oral tongue, managed between 1973 and 1986 (UICC staging system). These T2N0 patients are part of a larger group of 430 patients with oral tongue carcinoma (T1, T2, T3) treated with irradiation alone. Of these 147 T2N0 patients, 70 were treated with interstitial implant alone and 77 with both external beam irradiation and implant. In the group treated with interstitial implant alone, the 5-year local control was 89.8% against 50.6% in those treated with external beam irradiation and interstitial implant (log-rank test, p = 0.00002); 67.6% versus 46.5% for locoregional control (p = 0.029); and 62.2% versus 34.7% for specific survival (p = 0.0015). Since 1980, all the patients treated by iridium implantation were protected with a leaded spacing device between the tongue and the mandible. Soft tissue necrosis and bone exposure following treatment were scored according to the following criteria: minor, moderate or severe. Seven moderate and one severe complications were recorded in the brachytherapy group. None of the patients required surgery. In the combined treatment group, six moderate and two severe complications were observed. Patients treated with interstitial implant alone, and showing moderate or severe complications had received an average brachytherapy dose of 7600 cGy. In the same group, the patients without complications had received an average dose of 6800 cGy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
PURPOSE: To investigate the importance of total treatment time on the outcome of external beam radiotherapy (EBRT) followed by internal brachytherapy for the treatment of oral tongue carcinoma. METHODS AND MATERIALS: Ninety-four patients with T1-T2N0 squamous cell carcinoma of the oral tongue were treated using 35-40 Gy EBRT followed by 35-40 Gy interstitial (137)Cs brachytherapy between 1985 and 1995. The interval between the end of EBRT and the start of interstitial treatment varied for numerous unavoidable reasons, with a mean of 25.3 days and standard deviation of 3.5 days. The median follow-up period was 59.1 months (range 6-146). RESULTS: The actuarial survival rate of all cases was 78.4% at 5 years. The 5-year local control rate for those with T1 and T2 was 92.8% and 62.7%, respectively (p < 0.05). The local control rate of the primary tumor in patients with a total treatment time >43 days was statistically lower than that of patients with a total treatment time < or =43 days in all patients (p < 0.05) and in the subgroup of Stage T2 patients (p < 0.05). Multivariate analysis revealed that the local control rates in all cases were significantly related to the T stage (T2 or not), total treatment time (>43 days or not), and location of disease (posterior or not). Regression analysis for 5-year local control as a function of treatment duration showed a 2% loss of local control per day of treatment extension >30 days (r = 0.94, p < 0.01). CONCLUSION: The total treatment time was associated with the local control rate in the RT of oral tongue carcinoma. The loss in local control was estimated to be 2.0% per additional day in our series for oral tongue carcinoma.  相似文献   

6.
PURPOSE: To evaluate the treatment results of low-dose-rate (LDR) and high-dose-rate (HDR) interstitial brachytherapy (ISBT) for T3 mobile tongue cancer. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Between 1974 and 1992, 61 patients with T3 mobile tongue cancer were treated with LDR ISBT using (192)Ir hairpins with or without single pins. In addition, between 1991 and 1999, 14 patients were treated with HDR ISBT. For nine patients treated with ISBT alone, the total dose was 59-94 Gy (median 72 Gy) within one week in LDR ISBT and 60 Gy/10 fractions/5 days in HDR ISBT. For 66 patients treated with a combination therapy of external beam radiotherapy (EBRT) and ISBT, the total dose was 12.5-60 Gy (median 30 Gy) of EBRT and 50-112 Gy (median 68 Gy) within 1 week in LDR ISBT or 32-60 Gy (median 48 Gy)/8-10 fractions/5-7 days in HDR ISBT. RESULTS: The 2- and 3-year local control rates of all patients were both 68%. The 2- and 3-year local control rates of patients treated with LDR ISBT were both 67%, and those with HDR ISBT were both 71%. The local control rate of patients treated with HDR ISBT was similar to those with LDR ISBT. CONCLUSIONS: ISBT for T3 mobile tongue cancer is effective and acceptable. The treatment result of HDR ISBT is almost similar to that of LDR ISBT for T3 mobile tongue cancer.  相似文献   

7.
PURPOSE: To evaluate the therapeutic results obtained with (192)Ir low-dose-rate interstitial brachytherapy in T2N0 mobile tongue carcinoma. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Between December 1979 and January 1998, 279 patients with T2N0 mobile tongue carcinoma were treated by exclusive low-dose-rate brachytherapy, with or without neck dissection. (192)Ir brachytherapy was performed according to the "Paris system" with a median total dose of 60 Gy (median dose rate, 0.5 Gy/h). RESULTS: Overall survival was 74.3% and 46.6% at 2 and 5 years. Local control was 79.1% at 2 years and regional control, respectively, 75.9% and 69.5% at 2 and 5 years (Kaplan-Meier method). Systematic dissection revealed 44.6% occult node metastases, and histologic lymph node involvement was identified as the main significant factor for survival. Complication rate was 16.5% (Grade 3, 2.9%). Half of the patients presented previous and/or successive malignant tumor (ear-nose-throat, esophagus, or bronchus). CONCLUSION: Exclusive low-dose-rate brachytherapy is an effective treatment for T2 tongue carcinoma. Regional control and survival are excellent in patients undergoing systematic neck dissection, which is mandatory in our experience because of a high rate of occult lymph node metastases.  相似文献   

8.
Bolner A  Mussari S  Fellin G  Pani G  Busana L  Caffo O  Tomio L 《Tumori》2002,88(2):137-141
AIMS: This study was undertaken to determine the outcome of patients with oropharyngeal cancer treated at the Radiotherapy Department of the Santa Chiara Hospital (Trento, Italy) with brachytherapy alone or combined with external beam radiotherapy (EBRT). MATERIAL AND METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed the medical records of 87 patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the oropharynx treated by radiation therapy between January 1986 and September 1999. The median age was 59 years and all patients had a minimum follow-up of one year. Tumor locations were 46 tonsillar region, 31 soft palate and 10 base of the tongue. The patients were staged as follows: 41 T1, 35 T2, 11 T3 with 70 N0, 9 N1 and 8 N2. They received either brachytherapy alone (14 patients) or a combination of external beam irradiation and brachytherapy (73 patients) using an afterloading iridium technique in a plastic tube. RESULTS: Overall primary tumor control, including salvage surgery, was 81/87 (93%). Control of metastatic cervical adenopathy was as follows: clinical stage N1, 5/9 patients; N2, 2/8 patients. The estimated five-year cause-specific survival and overall survival rates were 81% and 47%, respectively. After interstitial irradiation severe complications were limited to one case of osteoradionecrosis of the mandible and seven cases of mucosal ulcer. CONCLUSION: This study confirms that iridium-192 interstitial implant alone or as a boost after external beam irradiation is a safe and effective therapy in the management of oropharyngeal carcinomas.  相似文献   

9.
A submandibular gland enlargement produces complications in the diagnosis of a nodal metastasis during the follow-up period in patients who have been given interstitial irradiation therapy for their oral cancers. Thus, a retrospective study has been made of the records of such affected patients, to accumulate knowledge regarding the frequency, the time of appearance, and the symptoms leading to the gland enlargement. Among 155 cases of squamous cell carcinoma of the tongue, 73 cases were selected for this study by the following criteria: (1) the patients were free of metastatic adenopathy, (2) they had been interstitially irradiated, and, (3) they were followed-up without surgical treatment for more than 6 months after the radiotherapy. Gland enlargement was found to have developed in 70% of the studied patients, that is, in 49 of the 73 cases within 9 months after radiotherapy.  相似文献   

10.
We retrospectively evaluated the results of the concurrent combination therapy of selective continuous intraarterial chemotherapy and radiotherapy in 39 patients with locally advanced cancer of the tongue and tongue base between September 1992 and January 2000. Thirty patients were fresh cases (stage II, 10 patients; stage III, 15; stage IV, five) and nine were recurrent cases. The primary lesion was present in the mobile tongue in 33 patients and the tongue base in six. External irradiation (median dose, 48.6 Gy) was performed in all patients, and interstitial brachytherapy using an Au grain or Cs needle (median dose, 50 Gy) in 21. In intraarterial chemotherapy, a catheter was selectively inserted into the lingual artery via the superficial temporal artery, and carboplatin (CBDCA) was continuously infused (median dose, 460 mg/m(2)) concurrently with radiotherapy. In 13 patients with cervical lymph node metastasis, two courses of systemic chemotherapy with 5-FU (700 mg/m(2) x 5 days) and cisplatin (40-50 mg/m(2)x2 days) or its analog was also performed. In 37 (94.9%) of the 39 patients in whom this combination therapy was completed, the response rate was 94.6%. The 3-year local control rate, progression-free survival rate, and overall survival rate by Kaplan-Meier's method were 79.2, 53.2, and 58.9%, respectively. This combination therapy was effective for locally advanced cancer of the tongue and tongue base without causing severe adverse side effects, and a local control rate comparable to that by surgery can be expected.  相似文献   

11.
Influence of age on the results of brachytherapy for early tongue cancer   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
PURPOSE: To determine the influence of elder age on the results of brachytherapy for early (T1-2 N0 M0) oral tongue cancer and examine the compatibility of low-dose rate (LDR) with high-dose rate (HDR) brachytherapy. METHODS AND MATERIALS: We analyzed 591 patients treated at Osaka University Hospital between 1967 and 1999. We compared the results of radiotherapy for 156 elderly patients (137 LDR and 19 HDR) 65 years of age or older and 435 patients (383 LDR and 52 HDR) less than 65 years of age. RESULTS: HDR brachytherapy showed the same local control rate as LDR brachytherapy (81% at 3 years). Elderly patients showed a poorer local control rate (75% at 3 years) than the younger group (83% at 3 years)(p = 0.002). Multivariate analysis identified age as the only prognostic factor for local control (p = 0.002). CONCLUSIONS: HDR brachytherapy achieved the same result as LDR brachytherapy. However, the elderly patient showed a higher rate of local recurrence after brachytherapy.  相似文献   

12.
AIMS AND BACKGROUND: Low-dose rate brachytherapy alone or in combination with external beam radiotherapy represents a well-established adjuvant treatment in soft tissue sarcomas following surgical resection. The experience with high-dose radiotherapy in this indication is limited. The purpose of our study was an evaluation of the viability of perioperative hyperfractionated high-dose rate brachytherapy in combination with external beam radiotherapy for primary and recurrent soft tissue sarcomas. PATIENTS AND METHODS: From February 1998 through June 2002, 10 adult patients with soft tissue sarcomas were treated by interstitial perioperative high-dose rate brachytherapy and external beam radiotherapy. TNM classification was pT2bpN0pM0 in 9 patients and pT1bpN0pM0 in 1 patient. Grade of differentiation was G1 (2 patients), G2 (n = 1), G3 (n = 5), G4 (n = 2). Surgical margins were negative in 7 cases, close in 2 cases and positive in 1 case. The tumor was localized in an extremity in all cases. Hyperfractionation 3 Gy twice daily at 10 mm from the plane of sources was used for brachytherapy, with total doses 18-30 Gy. The patients received external beam radiotherapy with doses 40-50 Gy after brachytherapy. Follow-up periods were between 24-71 months (median, 46). RESULTS: Local control of the disease was achieved in all 10 patients. Distant metastases occurred in 2 cases. One patient was disease free after salvage surgery and chemotherapy, and one patient died of lung disease progression 14 months after brachytherapy. In one case, subcutaneous fistula occurred after radiotherapy and was cured by an excision. Six patients experienced grade 1 or 2 fibrosis and 1 case a mild peripheral neuropathy was recorded. CONCLUSIONS: Our study on a small number of patients suggests that perioperative hyperfractionated high-dose rate brachytherapy with doses 8 x 3 Gy in combination with external beam radiotherapy 40-50 Gy is a promising method to achieve high biological doses in the postoperative radiotherapy of soft tissue sarcomas without severe late morbidity and warrants further research.  相似文献   

13.
In a review of 193 patients with carcinoma of the tongue who underwent interstitial radiotherapy in our hospital from November 1978 to 1986, 5 year actuarial local control rate were 97%, 87%, 58% and 77% for T1, T2, T3 and T4 respectively. Mucosal ulcers with tissue defects and bone exposure of the mandible occurred in 5 years after the treatments, 6%, 22%, 44%, and 100% for T1, T2, T3 and T4, respectively. Therapeutic ratio was 1 in patients with T1 who underwent interstitial radiotherapy (70 Gy/7 days) alone while it was less than 1 in those with T2 or more. Therapeutic gain factor was less than 1 in patients with combined external radiotherapy.  相似文献   

14.
BACKGROUND: Early stage squamous cell carcinoma of the base of the tongue has been successfully treated with radiotherapy and brachytherapy. However, the vast majority of these tumours seen in Western Europe are already at an advanced stage. Medical records of 79 patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the base of the tongue treated between 1980 and 1994 were examined. METHODS: Eighty-three per cent of the primary tumours were stage T3 or T4. Fifty-nine patients were treated with surgery and post-operative radiotherapy. Quality of life assessment amongst the survivors was performed by means of a questionnaire. RESULTS: Five year disease free survival in patients undergoing excision for T3-T4 tumours was 59%. Patients with T2-T3 tumours undergoing partial excision of the tongue base had a 3 year recurrence free survival rate of 68%. Distant metastasis occurred in 16%. Seventy-eight per cent of the patients judged their quality of life to be near normal. CONCLUSION: Surgery and post-operative radiotherapy offer a reasonably good survival in advanced carcinoma of the base of the tongue with preservation of quality of life.  相似文献   

15.
Between 1981 and 1986, 17 patients were treated at the Department of Radiation Oncology at the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center with squamous cancer of the base of the tongue whose definitive treatment included brachytherapy. The patient sample consisted of 14 men and 3 women with age range of 35 to 71 years (median = 58). There were four patients with T1 lesions, six with T2, six with T3, and one with T4. In general, treatment consisted of 5000-5400 cGy with external beam radiation and 2000-3000 cGy boost to the base of tongue via an Ir-192 implant using afterloading catheters. Necks were managed with elective radiation alone in the N0 group (n = 5) or with radiation plus neck dissection in the N+ group (n = 12). Five patients who would have required laryngectomy had they undergone primary surgery received neoadjuvant chemotherapy followed by external beam and implant as part of a larynx preservation study that was being done at our institution (4-T3, 1-T2). The range of follow-up is 8 to 59 months, with median follow-up of 24 months. No patients have been lost to follow-up. Crude local control by T-Stage are as follows: T1-4/4, T2-5/6, T3-5/6, T4-1/1. Actuarial local control at 24 months is 87%. There have been no neck failures. There have been five patients who had soft tissue ulceration (STU) and one patient who had osteoradionecrosis (ORN). All soft tissue ulceration patients have been successfully managed conservatively. The patient with osteoradionecrosis is currently being managed. In 4 of these 6 cases, the implant was the initial therapeutic intervention and the entire tumor bed was implanted. On the other hand, when external beam was the initial treatment, the boost was administered to the smaller volume of residual disease. Overall, 4 of 7 patients who had implant first developed either soft tissue ulceration or osteoradionecrosis, as opposed to 2 of 10 patients who had implant after external beam and/or chemotherapy. The numbers are too small to be statistically significant, but our current policy is to perform brachytherapy after the external beam. In addition, all those with either soft tissue ulceration or osteoradionecrosis were implanted with a non-looping technique. Overall, 6 of 12 patients treated with a non-looping technique developed an injury, whereas none of the five treated with a looping technique has developed one.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
Background This retrospective study was carried out to clarify whether interstitial radiotherapy is effective in the management of carcinoma of the tongue. Methods The subjects were 65 previously untreated patients with invasive squamous cell carcinoma of the anterior two-thirds of the tongue who received mainly interstitial radiotherapy using137Cs needles with or without external irradiation between 1977 and 1993. Results The local control rate was 80% for T1, 73% for T2, 57% for T3 and 73% overall. Thirteen of 16 patients for whom local control failed achieved good control by salvage surgery. The local control rates were slightly lower with combined radiotherapy (64%) than with the interstitial radiotherapy alone (78%), but there was no significant difference between external radiation (≤30 Gy) and external radiation (>30 Gy). Cervical lymph node metastases developed in 26% of patients with T1-3 NO. Neck control was achieved in 20 (74%) of 27 patients in whom pathologically positive nodes were found. Twenty-two patients developed soft tissue or/and mandibular complications for a total of 28 cases. Soft tissue complications were more likely to occur in patients who received interstitial radiotherapy alone. On the other hand, mandibular complications were likely to occur in patients who received external irradiation. The cumulative 5-year survival rate was 92% for T1, 72% for T2 and 33% for T3. The 5-year survival rate of patients with subsequent cervical node metastases was 41%, whereas in patients without subsequent cervical node metastases it was 89% (P<0.001). Conclusions Interstitial radiotherapy with or without external irradiation has useful implications in the local control of newly diagnosed cases of tongue cancer. If local recurrence develops, it is possible to control the primary lesion and prolong survival by salvage surgery. The most effective treatment modality for neck control and survival could not be determined from this study.  相似文献   

17.
A clinical study using 252Cf sources in brachytherapy of tumors began in the Research Institute of Medical Radiology of the Academy of Medical Sciences of the USSR in 1973. 252Cf afterloading cells were utilized by the method of simple afterloading. Dosimetry and radiation protection of medical personnel were developed. To substantiate optimal therapeutic doses of 252Cf neutrons, a correlation of dose, time, and treatment volume factors with clinical results of 252Cf interstitial implants in carcinoma of the tongue for 47 patients with a minimum follow-up period of 1 year was studied. Forty-nine interstitial implants have been performed. Seventeen patients received 252Cf implants alone (Group I), 17 other patients received 252Cf implants in combination with external radiation (Group II), and 15 patients were treated with interstitial implants for recurrent or residual tumors (Group III). Complete regression of carcinoma of the tongue was obtained in 48 patients (98%). Recurrences occurred in 1 patient (6%) in Group I, 6 patients (35%) in Group II, and 5 patients (33%) in Group III. Thirteen patients (27%) developed radiation necrosis. The therapeutic dose of neutron radiation from 252Cf sources in interstitial radiotherapy of primary tongue carcinomas (Group I) was found to be 7 to 9 Gy. Optimal therapeutic neutron dose in combined interstitial and external radiotherapy of primary tumors (Group II) was 5 to 6 Gy with an external radiation dose of 40 Gy. For recurrent and residual tumors (Group III), favorable results were obtained with tumor doses of 6.5 to 7 Gy.  相似文献   

18.
PURPOSE: To examine the prognostic factors for lymph node metastasis after brachytherapy for early (T1-T2N0M0) oral tongue cancer. METHODS AND MATERIALS: We reviewed the records of 571 patients (500 low dose rate and 71 high dose rate) treated at Osaka University Hospital between 1967 and 1999. RESULTS: Patients with lymph node metastasis had tumor with an average diameter of 26 +/- 8 mm and a thickness of 9 +/- 5 mm; for patients without lymph node metastasis, the corresponding dimensions were 23 +/- 8 mm and 7.5 +/- 4 mm (p = 0.0004 and 0.001, respectively). After 5 years, the ulcerative (48%) and indurative/infiltrative (39%) types showed a higher ratio of nodal involvement than the exophytic (31%) and superficial (19%) types (p <0.0001). Multivariate analysis showed ulceration (p = 0.006) and a thickness of 相似文献   

19.
At Osaka University Hospital, the 5-year survival rate for carcinoma of the tongue, treated by radiotherapy, is almost 60% and in early cases, around 80%. However, with this improvement in the survival rate, an increase in the incidence of various complications (xerostomia, soft tissue ulcer, bone damage, etc.) has been observed. Because of these circumstances, a radiographic analysis on the bone damage of the mandibles after radiotherapy was made. Only those patients whose progress had been followed for more than one year and whose disease was well controlled were selected for this study. Early radiographic signs of bone damages showed an enlargement of the periodontal space and a loss of lamina dura. From the results of the study it has been found that bone damage is less common in patients treated by interstitial radiotherapy alone. Bone damage seems to develop more frequently in patients who receive about 30 Gy by external radiotherapy, followed by more than 2,000 mgh. Ra. eq. of interstitial radiotherapy.  相似文献   

20.
Of 221 patients with carcinoma of the mobile tongue treated by radiotherapy, 129 survived without local recurrence for 5 years or longer after initial treatment. These 129 patients were studied to determine the incidence of second carcinoma of the tongue which first appeared more than 5 years after the initial treatment. Modalities of irradiation were radium needle implantation and intraoral electron irradiation for 105 and 24 patients, respectively. Twenty-two of the patients were found to have second carcinoma of the tongue. The incidence appeared to increase as the amount of radiation given increased. No obvious relationships were observed between the second carcinoma and modality of irradiation, T classification, presence of leukoplakia before the treatment, degree of histological differentiation, or degree of radiation injury. There were moderate to severe radiation injuries in 50% of the patients treated by radium needle implantation. It is likely that most of the second carcinomas of the tongue represent the late appearance of one of the multicentric foci of the tumor, not a regrowth of the residual primary tumor. In spite of the rather high rate of second carcinoma of the tongue, radiotherapy remains an excellent modality of treatment when patients are properly selected.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号