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Radiation chronotherapy—clinical impact of treatment time-of-day: a systematic review
by
Gilbert, Mark
, Smart, DeeDee
, Armstrong, Terri S.
, Shuboni-Mulligan, Dorela D.
, Breton, Ghislain
in
Brain cancer
/ Brain tumors
/ Chronotherapy - methods
/ Circadian rhythms
/ Clinical trials
/ Humans
/ Ionizing radiation
/ Literature reviews
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Mucosa
/ Neoplasms - radiotherapy
/ Neoplasms - therapy
/ Neurology
/ Oncology
/ Patients
/ Radiation therapy
/ Radiotherapy - methods
/ Systematic review
/ Topic Review
2019
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Radiation chronotherapy—clinical impact of treatment time-of-day: a systematic review
by
Gilbert, Mark
, Smart, DeeDee
, Armstrong, Terri S.
, Shuboni-Mulligan, Dorela D.
, Breton, Ghislain
in
Brain cancer
/ Brain tumors
/ Chronotherapy - methods
/ Circadian rhythms
/ Clinical trials
/ Humans
/ Ionizing radiation
/ Literature reviews
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Mucosa
/ Neoplasms - radiotherapy
/ Neoplasms - therapy
/ Neurology
/ Oncology
/ Patients
/ Radiation therapy
/ Radiotherapy - methods
/ Systematic review
/ Topic Review
2019
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Radiation chronotherapy—clinical impact of treatment time-of-day: a systematic review
by
Gilbert, Mark
, Smart, DeeDee
, Armstrong, Terri S.
, Shuboni-Mulligan, Dorela D.
, Breton, Ghislain
in
Brain cancer
/ Brain tumors
/ Chronotherapy - methods
/ Circadian rhythms
/ Clinical trials
/ Humans
/ Ionizing radiation
/ Literature reviews
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Mucosa
/ Neoplasms - radiotherapy
/ Neoplasms - therapy
/ Neurology
/ Oncology
/ Patients
/ Radiation therapy
/ Radiotherapy - methods
/ Systematic review
/ Topic Review
2019
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Radiation chronotherapy—clinical impact of treatment time-of-day: a systematic review
Journal Article
Radiation chronotherapy—clinical impact of treatment time-of-day: a systematic review
2019
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Overview
Purpose
Many brain tumor patients suffer from radiation-induced toxicities. Chronotherapy is a treatment modality that utilizes circadian rhythms to optimize the effect on tumor while minimizing negative outcomes on healthy tissue. This review aims to systematically examine the literature on the application of a radiation chronotherapeutic for all cancers and determine the possible advantages of incorporating a circadian-based fixed time-of-day for radiotherapy into CNS cancers.
Methods
A systematic review of the literature was conducted in two electronic databases from inception to February 1, 2019. Primary research manuscripts were screened for those related to adult human subjects exposed to ionizing radiation using the chronotherapy technique.
Results
Nine manuscripts were included in the review from 79 eligible articles. Three were prospective randomized trails and 6 were retrospective reviews. This survey revealed that overall survival and tumor control do not have consistent effects with only 60% and 55.5% of paper which included the variables having some significance, respectively. Treatment symptoms were the primary endpoint for both the prospective trials and were examined in 3 of the retrospective reviews; effects were observed in sensitive tissue for all 5 studies including mucosal linings and skin basal layer.
Conclusions
Existing literature suggests that the application of radiation chronotherapy may reduce negative symptom outcome within highly proliferative tissues. Further examination of radiation chronotherapy in well-designed prospective trials and studies in brain tumor patients are merited.
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