Radiographic appearance of the chest following therapy for Hodgkin disease

This study was carried out to define the post-treatment appearance of the chest radiographs in 44 consecutive patients with Hodgkin disease who received mantle irradiation with or without chemotherapy and to determine how the incidence and severity of post-treatment abnormalities relate to the radia...

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Veröffentlicht in:European journal of radiology 2000-08, Vol.35 (2), p.136-148
Hauptverfasser: Loyer, Evelyne, Fuller, Lillian, Libshitz, Herman I, Palmer, J.Lynn
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container_title European journal of radiology
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creator Loyer, Evelyne
Fuller, Lillian
Libshitz, Herman I
Palmer, J.Lynn
description This study was carried out to define the post-treatment appearance of the chest radiographs in 44 consecutive patients with Hodgkin disease who received mantle irradiation with or without chemotherapy and to determine how the incidence and severity of post-treatment abnormalities relate to the radiation parameters and chemotherapeutic regimens. Radiographs of the chest in 44 patients, computed tomograms of the chest in 31 patients and of the abdomen of 35 patients were reviewed, prior to and following treatment, for mediastinal contours, pericardial status, cardiac size and pulmonary fibrosis. All patients were followed for a minimum of 1 year and 27 were followed for more than 5 years. Stable post-treatment imaging studies were correlated with the initial extent of disease, radiation parameters, and chemotherapeutic regimens. Stable post-treatment findings were categorised as follows: the chest radiograph was normal or showed subtle vascular reorientation; moderate paramediastinal fibrosis was present; severe pulmonary fibrosis had occurred with narrowing of the cardiomediastinal silhouette in some patients. In general, the severity of the fibrosis was dependent on (1) the size of the radiation fields and on whether or not the coverage of the hila included a 1- to 2-cm margin; (2) the amounts of chemotherapy and particularly bleomycin containing regimens and (3) individual susceptibility of normal tissue irradiation. Therapy for Hodgkin disease is not necessarily associated with radiographic sequelae regardless of the initial status of the mediastinum or the treatment. However, the post-treatment appearance of the chest radiographs in this study was related strongly to (1) the initial extent of disease and particularly the status of the hila, both of which influenced the amounts of lung parenchyma that were included in the treatment fields; (2) the use of bleomycin in chemotherapy regimens and (3) individual normal tissue radiosensitivity.
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Malignant lymphomas. Malignant reticulosis. 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subjects Adolescent
Adult
Biological and medical sciences
Bleomycin - adverse effects
Bleomycin - therapeutic use
Chemotherapy
Chest X-ray
Combined Modality Therapy
Computerized tomography
Diseases
Female
Follow-Up Studies
Hematologic and hematopoietic diseases
Hodgkin disease
Hodgkin Disease - classification
Hodgkin Disease - diagnostic imaging
Hodgkin Disease - therapy
Humans
Leukemias. Malignant lymphomas. Malignant reticulosis. Myelofibrosis
Lung - diagnostic imaging
Lung - pathology
Male
Medical sciences
Middle Aged
Pulmonary diseases
Radiation
Radiation Pneumonitis - diagnostic imaging
Radiology
Radiotherapy
Radiotherapy - adverse effects
Respiratory therapy
Tomography, X-Ray Computed
title Radiographic appearance of the chest following therapy for Hodgkin disease
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