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Genetics of male infertility
Authors:TB Hargreave  C Ghosh  H Cooke
Affiliation:Radiotherapy Unit, Department of Oncology, Rambam Medical Center and Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa.
Abstract:This study was undertaken to analyze the influence of total skin dose and dose-fractionation schedules on the response rate, survival and skin toxicity of patients with mycosis fungoides MF] treated with total skin electron irradiation TSEI]. From 1979 to 1992, 40 patients with MF were treated with TSEI using a modified Christie Hospital technique. Mean follow-up time was 48 months median 20 months]. 37/40 patients completed TSEI; three died due to non-treatment-related conditions during therapy. 34/37 92%] treated patients achieved complete remission CR] and 16/40 40%] are alive with no evidence of disease. Over the years, changes in dose-fractionation schedules were made and correlated with the pattern of CR and skin toxicity. The 5-year actuarial survival Stanford staging] was 84% in Stages IA-IB all Stage IA patients are alive] and 59% in Stage II. The probability of survival of Stage III-IV patients was 30% at 30 months. Late skin toxicity was mild to moderate in 60% and severe in 25% of patients. A reduction of the total dose and dose-per-fraction resulted in an acceptable CR rate and a significantly lower toxicity. TSEI is effective in early stage MF. Skin control and late skin toxicity seem to be dose-fractionation-schedule related. For the early stages, the optimal treatment schedule seems to be 24-30 Gy to the whole skin surface in 2.4-3.0 Gy fractions, given twice weekly over a period of four to six weeks. Total doses of 24-30 Gy at 2.4-3.0 Gy per fraction yielded comparable skin control rates with lower skin toxicity.
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