Haemostatic radiotherapy for bleeding cancers of the upper gastrointestinal tract

Bleeding can cause significant morbidity in patients with upper gastrointestinal malignancies. Palliative radiotherapy can palliate bleeding effectively across numerous cancer sites such as the lung and rectum. The data available regarding the role in bleeding from upper gastrointestinal cancers are...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inBritish journal of hospital medicine (London, England : 2005) Vol. 80; no. 10; p. 579
Main Authors Hughes, Christopher, Radhakrishna, Ganesh
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England 02.10.2019
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Summary:Bleeding can cause significant morbidity in patients with upper gastrointestinal malignancies. Palliative radiotherapy can palliate bleeding effectively across numerous cancer sites such as the lung and rectum. The data available regarding the role in bleeding from upper gastrointestinal cancers are limited to a single meta-analysis, a phase 2 trial, eleven retrospective cohorts and two case reports, with the majority focusing on gastric cancer. From the data available radiotherapy appears to be a well-tolerated, effective haemostatic agent that should be considered in all patients with bleeding from an upper gastrointestinal malignancy. Questions remain regarding the radiobiology of haemostasis and the optimum fractionation schedule. There is no convincing evidence that protracted higher dose regimens provide additional benefit. Commonly used fractionation schedules use 1, 5 or 10 fractions. Short fractionation schedules have been used in patients with deteriorating performance status.
ISSN:1750-8460
DOI:10.12968/hmed.2019.80.10.579