• Lutte contre les cancers

  • Qualité de vie, soins de support

  • Testicule

Long-term neurotoxicity and quality of life in testicular cancer survivors—a nationwide cohort study

Menée au Danemark par questionnaire auprès de 2 234 patients ayant survécu à un cancer du testicule, cette étude de cohorte analyse la neurotoxicité des traitements anticancéreux et l’effet de cette toxicité sur la qualité de vie (durée médiane de suivi : 18,4 ans)

Purpose : To evaluate neurotoxicity in testicular cancer survivors (TCSs) years after treatment and secondly the influence of neurotoxicity on quality-of-life (QoL). Methods : We identified 2234 TCSs who completed the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy/Gynecologic Oncology Group-Neurotoxicity questionnaire. QoL was evaluated with the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer QLQ-C30. Patients were grouped according to treatment strategy: surveillance (N?=?1113), infradiaphragmatic radiotherapy (N?=?301), cisplatin-etoposide-bleomycin (BEP) (N?=?759), and more than one line of treatment (MTOL) (N?=?61). Association of treatment modality with long-term neurotoxicity was analyzed with ordinal logistic regression. Secondly, associations between neurotoxicity and QoL were analyzed in BEP-treated patients. Analyses were age-adjusted and repeated with additional adjustment for comorbidity, smoking, and alcohol consumption. Results : After a median follow-up of 18.4 years, treatment with BEP and MTOL was associated with overall increased risk of neurotoxicity (odds ratio 2.4–4.7 depending on treatment intensity, P?<?0.001) as well as subscales (peripheral neuropathy, ototoxicity, and dysfunction associated with neuropathy, all P?<?0.001). Radiotherapy and surveillance were not associated with neurotoxicity. In patients treated with BEP, neurotoxicity was highly associated with all indicators of worse QoL outcomes (P-trend: 1.5?×?10?17 to 1.1?×?10?28) after almost 20 years of follow-up. Conclusions : Treatment with BEP was associated with long-term neurotoxicity, which was highly associated with decreased QoL. Strategies to ameliorate or prevent neurotoxicity should be investigated. Implications for Cancer Survivors : Treatment with chemotherapy for testicular cancer induces long-term neuro- and ototoxicity which may have severe influence on quality-of-life years after treatment cessation.

Journal of Cancer Survivorship

Voir le bulletin