Background
To evaluate the efficiency of local radiotherapy to metastatic lesions in patients with metastatic nasopharyngeal carcinoma (mNPC).
Methods
The overall survival was observed and compared for mNPC patients who received local radiotherapy versus nonradiotherapy to metastatic lesions by using the Kaplan–Meier method and Cox analysis.
Results
One hundred and nine patients with NPC were involved in this study, with 61 (56.0%) received radiotherapy to metastatic sites and 48 (44.0%) did not receive radiotherapy to metastatic sites. The 2‐ and 5‐year OS for patients who received local radiotherapy to metastatic lesions were 65.8% and 35.7%, and for patients who did not receive radiotherapy to metastatic lesions were 45.3% and 26.2%. The multivariable adjusted hazard radios for local radiotherapy versus nonradiotherapy to metastatic lesions were 0.482 (95% confidence interval is 0.278–0.834, p = 0.009).
Conclusions
Local radiotherapy to metastatic lesions might be a protective factor for patients with mNPC.
Thymoma combined with pure red cell aplasia (PRCA) and acquired amegakaryocytic thrombocytopenia (AAMT) has been rarely reported, often occurring in the initial stage of treatment and after chemotherapy or thymectomy, while PRCA and AAMT occurring after radiotherapy for thymoma has not been reported. The present study describes the case of a 42-year-old female patient with thymoma complicated by radiation-induced PRCA and AAMT after a rapid response to radiotherapy, who was in complete remission without recurrence after adjustment of initial symptomatic therapy to cyclosporine combined with prednisone. After 1 month, the patient underwent complete resection of mediastinal tumor. Next-generation sequencing revealed that the DNA damage repair pathway-related gene MSH3 was mutated, with p.A57P in abundance of 9.21%. To the best of our knowledge, the present study is the first to report that PRCA and AAMT secondary to thymoma after radiotherapy may be associated with increased sensitivity to radiotherapy caused by a mutation in the MSH3 gene.
That historians of science view Science and Civilisation in China as an outdated classic and non-expert readers approach it as an exotic encyclopedia would be quite to its founder’s disappointment.
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