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. 2003 Nov 15;18(10):987-94.
doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2036.2003.01760.x.

How patients manage gastrointestinal symptoms after pelvic radiotherapy

Affiliations

How patients manage gastrointestinal symptoms after pelvic radiotherapy

B Gami et al. Aliment Pharmacol Ther. .

Abstract

Background: Approximately 13,000 patients undergo pelvic radiotherapy annually in the UK. It is not clear how frequently patients develop a permanent change in bowel habit after pelvic radiotherapy that affects their quality of life because the measures of gastrointestinal toxicity used in trials in the past have generally been inadequate. It has been suggested that patients who are symptomatic are only rarely referred to a gastroenterologist and it is not known how patients manage their symptoms.

Methods: Patients who had completed radiotherapy for pelvic cancer at least 1 year previously were invited to answer 30 structured questions in a face-to-face interview to determine the frequency of gastrointestinal symptoms and what orthodox, dietary and complementary therapies they used to deal with them. They were also asked to score the effectiveness of the measures they had taken.

Results: One hundred and seven patients were recruited [35 males; median age, 65 years (range, 35-80 years); 72 females; median age, 67.5 years (range, 31-87 years)]. Eight had been treated for a gastrointestinal primary tumour, 34 for a urological tumour and 65 for gynaecological tumours. Eighty-seven patients (81%) described new-onset gastrointestinal problems starting after radiotherapy. These symptoms affected the quality of life in 56 patients (52%). Significant effects on the quality of life were caused by diarrhoea or constipation (n = 53), faecal leakage (n = 19), abdominal, rectal or perineal pain (n = 14) and rectal bleeding (n = 6). Fifty-nine patients had seen a doctor for their symptoms (86% found this helpful), 12 had seen a dietician or nurse (50% found this helpful) and 14 had seen alternative practitioners (88% found this helpful). Dietary manipulation generally did not improve symptoms, except in a small group of patients (14/15) who avoided raw vegetables to great benefit.

Conclusions: At least 1 year after pelvic radiotherapy, gastrointestinal symptoms which have an adverse effect on the quality of life may be more common than generally reported. Patients found that advice from doctors and alternative practitioners was equally valuable. Dietary manipulation was generally unhelpful for gastrointestinal symptoms after pelvic radiotherapy, although the role of eliminating raw vegetables may benefit from further evaluation.

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