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Clinical Trial
. 2009 Jan;31(1):77-84.
doi: 10.1002/hed.20937.

First-year quality of life assessment of an intra-arterial (RADPLAT) versus intravenous chemoradiation phase III trial

Affiliations
Clinical Trial

First-year quality of life assessment of an intra-arterial (RADPLAT) versus intravenous chemoradiation phase III trial

Annemieke H Ackerstaff et al. Head Neck. 2009 Jan.

Abstract

Background: We report the results of a multicenter randomized phase III study, assessing quality of life (QOL) in intra-arterial (IA) versus standard intravenous (IV) chemoradiation in advanced head and neck cancer.

Methods: Two hundred seven patients with inoperable stage IV disease-152 men and 55 women; mean age, 55 years-were included in this study. The patients were treated with standard radiotherapy with 4 weekly IA or 3 weekly IV cisplatin infusions. The QOL assessments carried out were EORTC-C30, H&N35, and trial-specific questionnaires.

Results: Overall QOL deteriorated in all patients during treatment, is gradually improving over 1 year. IA patients showed significantly less nausea and vomiting at week 7 (p <.001). IV patients were significantly more fatigued (p <.006). At 1 year, no significant difference in tube feeding was found. Voice quality slightly exceeded the pretreatment values at 1 year. Forty-two of 62 employed patients returned to work.

Conclusion: During treatment, significantly fewer problems with nausea and vomiting occurred in IA than in IV patients. Both groups showed improved voicing and oral intake during follow-up, often exceeding pretreatment values at 1 year.

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