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Radiation-induced lung injury — what do we know in the era of modern radiotherapy?

Marek Konkol, Paweł Śniatała, Piotr Milecki

2022Reports of Practical Oncology & Radiotherapy35 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Radiation-induced lung injury (RILI) that is usually divided into an early radiation-induced pneumonitis (RIP) and late chronic radiation-induced lung fibrosis (RILF) remains a clinically significant toxicity in radiation oncology. Thus, a thorough understanding of underlying molecular mechanisms and risk factors is crucial. This review, focused on patients treated with modern radiotherapy (RT) techniques, describes the different clinical presentations of RIP, with most typical imaging findings and usefulness of pulmonary function tests and laboratory assessment in differential diagnosis. The most critical patient- and treatment-related predictors are summarized and discussed - age and sex, comorbidities, tumour characteristics, concomitant treatment, and RT-plan parameters. The conventional grading scales and contemporary approach to quantitative assessment (radiomics, CT density changes) is described as well as treatment methods.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineRadiation therapyGrading (engineering)ConcomitantRadiation PneumonitisLungPulmonary fibrosisMedical physicsRadiologyOncologyIntensive care medicineInternal medicineEngineeringCivil engineeringEffects of Radiation ExposureLung Cancer Diagnosis and TreatmentAdvanced Radiotherapy Techniques
Radiation-induced lung injury — what do we know in the era of modern radiotherapy? | Litcius