Radiation-induced skin changes after breast or chest wall irradiation in patients with breast cancer and skin of color: a systematic review

•In this systematic review, data indicates potentially worse radiation dermatitis in Black/ African American and Hispanic patients•However, methods to characterize skin of color and measure radiation dermatitis are subjective•Objective skin color changes after radiation are reported, but there are n...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical breast cancer 2023-01, Vol.23 (1), p.1-14
Hauptverfasser: Purswani, Juhi M., Nwankwo, Christy, Adotama, Prince, Gutierrez, Daniel, Perez, Carmen A., Tattersall, Ian W., Gerber, Naamit K.
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container_end_page 14
container_issue 1
container_start_page 1
container_title Clinical breast cancer
container_volume 23
creator Purswani, Juhi M.
Nwankwo, Christy
Adotama, Prince
Gutierrez, Daniel
Perez, Carmen A.
Tattersall, Ian W.
Gerber, Naamit K.
description •In this systematic review, data indicates potentially worse radiation dermatitis in Black/ African American and Hispanic patients•However, methods to characterize skin of color and measure radiation dermatitis are subjective•Objective skin color changes after radiation are reported, but there are no studies that objectively measure radiation dermatitis and include skin of color as a variable•It is necessary to utilize objective methods to measure skin pigmentation, and correlate this with valuable metrics of radiation that are relevant to skin of color The purpose of this study is to systematically review data pertaining to breast cancer and radiation-induced skin reactions in patients with skin of color (SOC), as well as data pertaining to objective measurements of skin pigmentation in the assessment of radiation dermatitis (RD). We conducted a systematic review utilizing MEDLINE electronic databases to identify published studies until August 2022. Key inclusion criteria included studies that described RD in breast cancer with data pertaining to skin of color and/or characterization of pigmentation changes after radiation. We identified 17 prospective cohort studies, 7 cross-sectional studies, 5 retrospective studies and 4 randomized controlled trials. Prospective cohort and retrospective series demonstrate worse RD in African American (AA) patients using subjective physician-graded scales. There is more limited data in patients representing other non-White racial subgroups with SOC. 2 studies utilize patient reported outcomes and 15 studies utilize objective methods to characterize pigmentation change after radiation. There are no prospective and randomized studies that objectively describe pigmentation changes with radiotherapy in SOC. AA patients appear to have worse RD outcomes, though this is not uniformly observed across all studies. There are no studies that describe objective measures of RD and include baseline skin pigmentation as a variable, limiting the ability to draw uniform conclusions on the rate and impact of RD in SOC. We highlight the importance of objectively characterizing SOC and pigmentation changes before, during and after radiotherapy to understand the incidence and severity of RD in SOC.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.clbc.2022.10.002
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subjects Black or African American
Breast Neoplasms - epidemiology
Breast or chest wall radiotherapy
Cross-Sectional Studies
Female
Humans
Prospective Studies
Radiation dermatitis
Radiation induced skin toxicity
Radiation toxicity
Radiodermatitis - epidemiology
Radiodermatitis - etiology
Retrospective Studies
Skin of color
Skin Pigmentation
Thoracic Wall - radiation effects
title Radiation-induced skin changes after breast or chest wall irradiation in patients with breast cancer and skin of color: a systematic review
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