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Physical and psychological symptoms of quality of life in the CHART randomized trial in head and neck cancer: Short-term and long-term patient reported symptoms
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  • Published: 12 November 1999

Physical and psychological symptoms of quality of life in the CHART randomized trial in head and neck cancer: Short-term and long-term patient reported symptoms

  • G O Griffiths1,
  • M K B Parmar1 &
  • A J Bailey1
  • on behalf of the CHART Steering Committee

British Journal of Cancer volume 81, pages 1196–1205 (1999)Cite this article

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Summary

The randomized multicentre trial of continuous hyperfractionated accelerated radiotherapy (CHART) versus conventional radiotherapy in patients with advanced head and neck cancer showed no good evidence of a difference in any of the major clinical outcomes of survival, freedom from metastases, loco-regional control and disease-free survival. Therefore an assessment of the effect of treatment on physical and psychological symptoms is vital to balance the costs and benefits of the two treatments. A total of 615 patients were asked to complete a Rotterdam Symptom Checklist and the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, which cover a variety of physical and psychological symptoms, at a total of ten time points. The data consisted of short-term data (the initial 3 months) and long-term data (1 and 2 years). The short-term data was split into an exploratory data set and a confirmatory data set, and analysed using subject-specific and group-based methods. Differences were only claimed if hypotheses generated in the exploratory data set were confirmed in the confirmatory data set. The long-term data was not split into two data sets and was analysed using a group-based approach. There was evidence of significantly worse symptoms of pain at day 21 in those treated with CHART and significantly worse symptoms of cough and hoarseness at 6 weeks in those treated conventionally. There was also evidence to suggest a higher degree of decreased sexual interest at 1 year and sore muscles at 2 years in those treated with conventional radiotherapy. There is no clear indication that one regimen is superior to the other in terms of ‘quality of life’, generally the initially more severe reaction in the CHART group being offset by the longer duration of symptoms in the conventionally treated group.

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Change history

  • 16 November 2011

    This paper was modified 12 months after initial publication to switch to Creative Commons licence terms, as noted at publication

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Authors and Affiliations

  1. Cancer Division Medical Research Council Clinical Trials Unit, 222 Euston Road, London, NW1 2DA, UK

    G O Griffiths, M K B Parmar & A J Bailey

Authors
  1. G O Griffiths
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  2. M K B Parmar
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  3. A J Bailey
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Consortia

on behalf of the CHART Steering Committee

Additional information

Members of the CHART Steering Committee at the onset of the trial: A Barrett (Chairman), SJ Arnott, D Ash, CK Bomford, PJ Bourdillon, B Cottier, M Cuthbert, P Dawes, S Dische, W Forbes, A Harvey, JM Henk, TA Hince, AH Laing, RH MacDougall, DAL Morgan, FE Neal, H Newman, MKB Parmar, AG Robertson, RI Rothwell, MI Saunders, VH Svoboda, RP Symonds, JS Tobias, MJ Whipp, H Yosef

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From twelve months after its original publication, this work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/

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Cite this article

Griffiths, G., Parmar, M., Bailey, A. et al. Physical and psychological symptoms of quality of life in the CHART randomized trial in head and neck cancer: Short-term and long-term patient reported symptoms. Br J Cancer 81, 1196–1205 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.bjc.6690829

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  • Received: 02 November 1998

  • Revised: 15 April 1999

  • Accepted: 16 June 1999

  • Published: 12 November 1999

  • Issue date: 01 December 1999

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.bjc.6690829

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Keywords

  • symptoms
  • head and neck cancer
  • radiotherapy
  • CHART

This article is cited by

  • Advances in Quality of Life Research Among Head and Neck Cancer Patients

    • Allen C. Sherman
    • Stephanie Simonton

    Current Oncology Reports (2010)

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