dc.description.abstract | Background/Aim: The study aimed to evaluate
practice changes in the time period of the early wave of the
COVID-19 pandemic. Patients and Methods: This was a
retrospective single institution study. We defined palliative
radiotherapy (PRT) initiated before Saturday, March 14th as
pre-COVID and PRT initiated later as during-COVID (through
June 30th). Results: National COVID-19 recommendations led
to a significant decrease in PRT with 10 or more fractions,
while re-irradiation and radiotherapy during the final 30 days
of life were equally common before and after these
recommendations had been issued in March 2020. Conclusion:
Rapid adoption of modified PRT regimens was feasible.
However, the challenge of overtreatment in the final phase of
the disease, due to inaccurate survival prediction, persisted.<p>
<p>Palliative radiotherapy (PRT) is among the cornerstones of
oncological approaches in patients with incurable cancer (1). In
our institution, which has a dedicated PRT program that serves
a small and scattered population of less than 200,000 inhabitants
in rural North-Norway (large parts of Nordland County with a
total of population of 243,000), overtreatment and 30-day
mortality (30DM) has long been a topic of research (2-6). The
first comprehensive analysis related to the time period 2007-
2009 (7). In 9% of patients, PRT was administered during the
final 30 days of life. We were able to develop and validate a
predictive model [presence of 6 parameters: lung or bladder
cancer, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG)
performance status (PS) of 3-4, low serum hemoglobin, opioid
analgesic use, steroid use, progressive disease outside the PRT
volume], which correctly identified 75% of PRT courses
administered during the final 30 days of life. Given that our
further research focused on PRT and survival prediction, and that
only three clinical oncologists assessed patients and prescribed
PRT, we hypothesized that increased awareness and knowledge
about factors predicting 30DM might have led to decreased
30DM in a later time period. Consequently, we evaluated our
data obtained between 01.09.2013 and 31.08.2014 (8). We were
disappointed to learn that even in our small facility, 30DM did
not improve compared to the first study (17% in patients with
metastatic cancer, 5% in those with non-metastatic cancer).
In March 2020, the global COVID-19 pandemic also
arrived in Norway. On March 10th, the Norwegian Institute
of Public Health had registered 277 people with confirmed
infection. Based on national recommendations distributed to
all oncology departments, we encouraged the utilization of
altered fractionation regimens with a focus on short overall
treatment time, as well as a thorough assessment of the
potential benefit of PRT, as also suggested by international
groups (9, 10). The aim of the present analysis was to
evaluate the impact of COVID-19-related changes, primarily
regarding PRT during the final 30 days of life and
secondarily regarding PRT with 10 or more fractions.<p>
Patients and Methods<p>
<p<We analyzed the treatment administered in the time period between
01.01.and 30.06.2020 and defined PRT initiated before Saturday,
March 14th as pre-COVID and PRT initiated later as during-COVID.
The analysis was performed on September 13th and survival data
were available for all patients. The statistical evaluation employed
the 2-tailed Fisher exact probability test (IBM SPSS v.25,
significance was defined as p≤0.05 in two-sided tests).<p>
Results<p>
<p>Forty-seven patients were treated in the pre-COVID phase (0.9
started PRT each business day; 25 received PRT for bone
metastases, 53%), including 5 re-irradiations (11%). The
largest group consisted of patients with non-small cell lung
cancer (n=15, 32%). Twenty-eight patients (60%) received 10
or more fractions. Only 3 patients (6%), all with metastatic
cancer, were treated during the final 30 days of life. | en_US |