An
international panel of cancer experts has recommended a one-week treatment
protocol for patients who need radiotherapy. On April 7, 2020, the group
discussed the best way to minimize the additional issues that radiotherapy
treatment causes, namely, weakened immune systems. Surgery, which usually
happens one to two weeks after radiotherapy, can be safely delayed by up to 12
weeks, says the expert panel.
People
with bowel cancer are more susceptible to severe complications from COVID-19
because their immune systems are weakened. Shortening the length of
radiotherapy replaces the need for chemotherapy, which typically can make the
immune system even weaker.
"The
COVID-19 pandemic is a global emergency and we needed to work very quickly to
identify changes that would benefit patients. Our recommendations were
published 20 days after our first meeting. This process normally takes many
months, if not years,” said David Sebag-Montefiore, professor of clinical
oncology at the University of Leeds and who lead the panel of cancer
experts.
The
panel, which was comprised of 15 top cancer professionals, showed that surgery
could be safely postponed after radiotherapy from oncology
equipment was performed. This
protocol allows surgery to be scheduled after the peak of the pandemic.
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