Publication | Open Access
Anaplastic Thyroid Carcinoma: Doxorubicin, hyperfractionated radiotherapy and surgery
54
Citations
20
References
1990
Year
Adaptive RadiotherapySurgical OncologyAnaplastic Thyroid CarcinomaRadiation TherapyMg DoxorubicinMedicineRadionuclide TherapyThyroid DiseaseSixteen Consecutive PatientsBreast CancerSurgeryDebulking SurgeryOncologyRadiation OncologyNuclear MedicineCancer ResearchRadiologyHealth Sciences
Sixteen consecutive patients with anaplastic carcinoma of the thyroid were prospectively treated according to a combined regimen consisting of hyperfractionated radiotherapy, doxorubicin and debulking surgery. The radiotherapy was preoperatively administered to a target dose of 30 Gy in 3 weeks, and postoperatively to an additional dose of 16 Gy in 1.5 weeks. Radiotherapy was administered twice daily, 5 days a week, with a target dose of 1 Gy per fraction and with a minimum interval of 6 hours. A dose of 20 mg doxorubicin was administered intravenously 1 to 2 hours before the first radiotherapy session every week. Debulking surgery was feasible in 9 patients. Local complete remission was achieved in 5 patients and 3 of these are still alive disease-free at 10, 30, and 30 months respectively after diagnosis. Only 6 patients succumbed to a local failure. This combination regimen was well tolerated despite the patients' high age and advanced disease.
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