Impact of Short-Course Preoperative Radiotherapy for Rectal Cancer on Patients' Quality of Life: Data From the Medical Research Council CR07/National Cancer Institute of Canada Clinical Trials Group C016 Randomized Clinical Trial
- 20 September 2010
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) in Journal of Clinical Oncology
- Vol. 28 (27), 4233-4239
- https://doi.org/10.1200/jco.2009.26.5264
Abstract
Purpose The Medical Research Council CR07/National Cancer Institute of Canada Clinical Trials Group C016 (MRC CR07/NCIC CTG C016) trial showed that, in patients with operable rectal cancer, short-course preoperative radiotherapy (PRE) reduced the rate of local recurrence compared with surgery followed by selective postoperative chemoradiotherapy for patients with a positive circumferential resection margin. However, the advantages of giving PRE to all patients needs to be balanced against any negative impact on patients' quality of life. Patients and Methods All 1,350 patients were asked to complete the Medical Outcomes Study Short-Form 36-item (MOS SF-36) and the European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire Colorectal 38-item (EORTC QLQ-CR38) questionnaires. A priori hypotheses related to the impact of treatment on sexual, bowel, and physical function and general health. Results Male sexual dysfunction was significantly increased following surgery (P < .001), although there was no difference between treatment arms. However, a treatment difference had emerged at 6 months (PRE patients reporting significantly greater dysfunction; P = .004), which persisted out to at least 2 years (an insufficient number of female patients completed the sexual dysfunction questions to draw firm conclusions). Both treatment groups reported similar levels of decreased physical function at 3 months, but thereafter it returned to baseline levels. There was no evidence of any major changes between treatments or time points in terms of general health or bowel function, but exploratory analysis indicated a significant (P = .006 at 2 years) increase in the level of fecal incontinence with PRE. Conclusion These results from a large randomized trial using validated patient-completed questionnaires show that, for males, the main adverse effect was sexual dysfunction, and the main cause of this was surgery, but that PRE also affected sexual and some aspects of bowel functioning.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Preoperative radiotherapy versus selective postoperative chemoradiotherapy in patients with rectal cancer (MRC CR07 and NCIC-CTG C016): a multicentre, randomised trialThe Lancet, 2009
- Communicating Quality of Life Information to Cancer Patients: A Study of Six Presentation FormatsJournal of Clinical Oncology, 2005
- The Analysis, Interpretation, and Presentation of Quality of Life DataJournal of Biopharmaceutical Statistics, 2004
- A Systematic Overview of Radiation Therapy Effects in Rectal CancerActa Oncologica, 2003
- Pain and Quality of Life After Treatment in Patients With Locally Recurrent Rectal CancerJournal of Clinical Oncology, 2002
- The impact of recurrent rectal cancer on quality of lifeEuropean Journal of Surgical Oncology, 2001
- Management of locally advanced rectal cancerSurgical Oncology, 2000
- The construction and testing of the EORTC colorectal cancer-specific quality of life questionnaire module (QLQ-CR38)European Journal Of Cancer, 1999
- Testing for differences in multiple quality of life dimensions: generating hypotheses from the experience of hospital staffQuality of Life Research, 1998
- The MOS 36-ltem Short-Form Health Survey (SF-36)Medical Care, 1992