Investigator

Ekkasit Tharavichitkul

associate professor · Chiang Mai University Faculty of Medicine, Department of Radiology

ETEkkasit Tharavich…
Papers(2)
Retrospective Analysi…The association of va…
Collaborators(8)
Imjai ChitapanaruxJintana RuanlaNadee ChitapanaruxPitchayaponne KlunklinPooriwat MuangwongSomvilai ChakrabandhuWarit ThongsukAnupong Kongsa
Institutions(1)
Chiang Mai University

Papers

Retrospective Analysis of All Types of Adjuvant Radiotherapy in Endometrial Cancer: Single-Center Experiences in a Middle-Income Country

We retrospectively analyzed the efficacy, focusing on overall survival (OS) and the patterns of failure, along with the toxicities of adjuvant radiotherapy (RT) in endometrial cancer patients. Two-hundred and nineteen patients with endometrial cancer patients who received adjuvant radiotherapy ± adjuvant chemotherapy (ACT) from January 2014 to December 2018 were investigated for overall survival (OS), local recurrence-free survival rate (LRFS), regional recurrence-free survival rate (RRFS), and distant metastasis-free survival rate (DMFS). Two-hundred and fourteen patients were evaluated. The numbers of VBT alone, EBRT plus VBT, and adjuvant chemotherapy (ACT) plus EBRT plus VBT were 65 (30.4%), 80 (37.4%), and 69 (32.2%) patients, respectively. Stage I (107 patients) was the most common followed by stage III (87 patients). With a median follow-up time of 67 months (IQR 56-78), the 5-year overall survival rates for VBT alone, EBRT plus VBT, and EBRT plus VBT plus ACT were 84.4%, 65%, and 57.4%, respectively. The most common severe (grade 3-4) acute toxicity was neutropenia (4.6%), followed by diarrhea (3.7%). Grade 3-4 late proctitis was found in only 1.9%. On multivariate analysis, advanced age (HR 6.15, p: 0.015), lymph node involvement (HR 6.66, p: 0.039), cervical involvement (HR 10.60, p: 0.029), and substantial LVSI (HR 21.46, p: 0.005) were associated with a higher risk of death. Advanced age (>65), substantial LVSI, lymph node involvement, and cervical stromal involvement were associated with poor overall survival. These findings here will help identifying high-risk patients and would make it possible to avoid unnecessary adjuvant treatment among patients with a good prognosis.

61Works
2Papers
8Collaborators

Positions

2005–

associate professor

Chiang Mai University Faculty of Medicine · Department of Radiology

Education

2005

Associate Professor

Chiang Mai University Faculty of Medicine · Radiology

Country

TH

Links & IDs
0000-0002-5495-1421

Scopus: 10144574200