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. 2015 Sep;56(5):811-7.
doi: 10.1093/jrr/rrv031. Epub 2015 Jul 28.

Hypofractionated electron-beam radiation therapy for keloids: retrospective study of 568 cases with 834 lesions

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Hypofractionated electron-beam radiation therapy for keloids: retrospective study of 568 cases with 834 lesions

Jie Shen et al. J Radiat Res. 2015 Sep.

Abstract

We aimed to analyze the outcomes of hypofractionated high-energy electron beam radiotherapy for the treatment of keloids. From February 1998 to January 2012, 568 patients with a total of 834 keloids underwent radiotherapy: 826 lesions with postoperative radiotherapy, and 36 with skin-grafting. Lesion size was >5 cm in 335 keloids. An electron-beam of 6 or 7 MeV was used, with a total dose of 18 Gy (two fractions with a 1-week interval) covering the lesion with a 1-cm margin. The time between surgery and radiotherapy was 24-48 h. Skin-grafted patients underwent radiotherapy 10-15 days after the operation. The median follow-up was 40 months (range: 12-160 months). The local control rate was 88.25% (736/834). The relapse rate was 9.59% (80/834), and the time to relapse was 6-28 months (median: 12 months). Univariate analyses showed that gender, age, keloid size, keloid site, skin grafting, and operation-to-irradiation interval influenced the local control rate. Multivariate analysis showed that the relapse rate was correlated with gender (P = 0.048), age (P < 0.01), operation-to-irradiation interval (P < 0.01), keloid site (P < 0.01), surgical method (P = 0.04) and keloid size (P < 0.02). Adverse effects were observed in 9.83% (82/834). No radiation-induced cancers were observed. Hypofractionated high-energy electron beam radiotherapy for keloids yielded excellent outcomes, especially in cases without skin grafting. Early postoperative radiotherapy with limited hypofractionation could be a good choice for keloid treatment.

Keywords: assessment; electron beam; keloids; prognosis; radiotherapy.

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Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Univariate analyses of control rate. (A) Gender, female vs male. (B) Age, ≤29 vs >29 years. (C) Keloid size, ≤5 cm vs >5 cm. (D) Keloid site, low stretch tension vs high stretch tension. (E) Surgical approach, without skin grafting vs with skin grafting. (F) Time interval between surgery and radiotherapy, ≤24 h vs 48 h vs >48 h.

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