Publication: Quality of life improvement in patients with bone metastases undergoing palliative radiotherapy.
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Date
2022-07-29
Authors
Cañón, Verónica
Gómez-Iturriaga, Alfonso
Casquero, Francisco
Rades, Dirk
Navarro, Arturo
Del Hoyo, Olga
Morillo, Virginia
Willisch, Patricia
López-Guerra, José Luis
Illescas-Vacas, Ana
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Abstract
The aim of the study was to analyze the impact of palliative radiotherapy on quality of life (QoL) in patients with symptomatic bone metastases. We present the results from a prospective multicentric study including 128 patients who provided pre- and post-radiotherapy (one month after treatment) brief pain inventory (BPI) assessments. Worst pain was recorded using the BPI (range: 0-10). Pain response was described according to the International Bone Metastases Consensus on palliative radiation. Regarding QoL, for each pre- and post-radiation BPI-questionnaire, scores from the interference domains were summed and averaged to obtain an overall interference score. There was a significant correlation between radiation treatment response and improvement in all functional interference domains except sleeping. Patients > 75 years old presented a significantly higher improvement in general activity, mood and relationships with others compared to patients ≤ 75 years old. Patients presenting a baseline pain score ≥ 8 showed a higher improvement in the general activity item (p = 0.049). There was no statistically significant association between pretreatment ECOG, chemotherapy, primary tumor location and radiation schedule with any of the functional interference items. Patients who report pain relief after palliative radiotherapy also present a better quality of life including physical and psychosocial aspects.
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Keywords
bone metastases, pain, palliative radiotherapy, quality of life