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The use of radiotherapy, surgery and chemotherapy in the curative treatment of cancer: results from the FORTY (Favourable Outcomes from RadioTherapY) project.

Authors :
MEE, THOMAS
KIRKBY, NORMAN F.
DEFOURNY, NOEMIE N.
KIRKBY, KAREN JOY
BURNET, NEIL G.
Source :
British Journal of Radiology. Dec2023, Vol. 96 Issue 1152, p1-8. 8p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Objectives Radiotherapy, surgery and chemotherapy play key roles in the curative treatment of cancer, alone and in combination. Quantifying their roles is essential for equipment provision and workforce planning. The estimate that 40% of cancer patients are cured by RT has been used extensively to inform and influence policy but is relatively old and warrants review. Methods Patient, tumour and treatment event data was obtained for the 5 year period from 2009 to 2013, allowing a further 5 years for survival outcomes to be known. We analysed patient-level data on utilisation of surgery, radiotherapy, and chemotherapy in cancer patients in England. Data were sourced from Public Health England, using National Cancer Registrations, the National Radiotherapy Dataset (RTDS) and the Systemic Anti-Cancer Therapy Dataset (SACT). All tumour sites (excluding C44) and ages were included. We analysed three cohorts: all patients [n = 1,029,569], patients who survived 5 years or more [n = 537,970] and patients who survived <5 years [n = 491,599]. Results Overall cancer-specific 5-year survival was 52%, and in those patients, surgery was the most common curative treatment, with 80% receiving surgery, alone or in combination; radiotherapy was delivered to 39% and chemotherapy to 29%; 45% received two and 13% all three modalities. Conclusions The high proportion receiving multimodality treatment emphasises the importance of integrated, resourced, multidisciplinary cancer care. Radiotherapy was delivered to almost 40% of patients who survived 5 years which underlines its importance in cancer management. Advances in knowledge The results are essential in planning cancer services. They also inform the public health narrative. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00071285
Volume :
96
Issue :
1152
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
British Journal of Radiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
175404740
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1259/bjr.20230334