2022
DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2022.936684
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Severe radiation-induced lymphopenia during postoperative radiotherapy or chemoradiotherapy has poor prognosis in patients with stage IIB-III after radical esophagectomy: A post hoc analysis of a randomized controlled trial

Abstract: ObjectiveTo investigate whether radiation-induced lymphopenia (RIL) affects survival and identify the predictors of RIL in postoperative esophageal cancer.Materials and methodsPost hoc analysis was conducted on data from 116 patients with esophageal cancer from a randomized controlled trial comparing adjuvant therapy with surgery alone. Doses of 54 Gy in 27 fractions was delivered in the postoperative radiotherapy (PORT) group and 50.4 Gy in 28 fractions combined with chemotherapy was delivered in postoperativ… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…However, there was a trend toward longer 5y DFS in patients with more severe lymphopoenia compared to patients with no or only mild lymphopoenia observed in the whole group of PV carriers. These observations contrast with previously published reports showing a clear negative effect of RILs on survival parameters in several types of solid tumours, including breast cancer (Venkatesulu et al, 2018;Abravan et al, 2020;Sun et al, 2020;Xie et al, 2020;Ni et al, 2022). Chemotherapy, lung doses, and radiotherapy techniques are reported to be the most important risk factors for the development of RIL in breast cancer after adjuvant radiotherapy (Chen et al, 2021).…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 68%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…However, there was a trend toward longer 5y DFS in patients with more severe lymphopoenia compared to patients with no or only mild lymphopoenia observed in the whole group of PV carriers. These observations contrast with previously published reports showing a clear negative effect of RILs on survival parameters in several types of solid tumours, including breast cancer (Venkatesulu et al, 2018;Abravan et al, 2020;Sun et al, 2020;Xie et al, 2020;Ni et al, 2022). Chemotherapy, lung doses, and radiotherapy techniques are reported to be the most important risk factors for the development of RIL in breast cancer after adjuvant radiotherapy (Chen et al, 2021).…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 68%
“…The association between reduced baseline immunity or low lymphocyte counts with cancer prognosis and outcome has been described in several studies (Venkatesulu et al, 2018;Abravan et al, 2020;Xie et al, 2020;Damen et al, 2021;Ni et al, 2022) demonstrating that severe radiotherapy-induced lymphopoenia (RIL; G3 and G4) significantly affects survival parameters in many solid tumours (e.g., oesophageal cancers, pancreatic cancers, and lung tumours) and represents an important prognostic factor. Sun and colleagues (2020) demonstrated a significantly lower 5y DFS for BC patients with more severe RIL (71.8 % vs 82.6 %; P = 0.01) and a lower RIL rate for the patients irradiated with hypofractionated adjuvant chest wall radiotherapy compared with normofractionated radiotherapy.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Lymphopenia is one of the most common adverse events during and after RT in a daily basis, and is deemed to be associated with poorer survival prognosis for cancer patients ( 69 , 70 ). Given that hematopoietic stem cells are sensitive to ionizing radiation, even low-dose irradiation may cause temporary bone marrow dysfunction, while high-dose RT may result in irreversible damage to bone marrow hematopoietic function and mesenchymal stromal cells ( 71 73 ).…”
Section: Immunosuppressive Effect Of Radiation Therapymentioning
confidence: 99%