Comprehensive salivary gland–sparing helical tomotherapy reduces radiation-induced xerostomia in nasopharyngeal carcinoma patients.
This prospective cohort study included 266 patients with nasopharyngeal carcinoma treated with comprehensive salivary gland–sparing helical tomotherapy (HT). The median follow-up duration was 70.5 months. The primary outcome assessed radiation-induced xerostomia, while secondary outcomes included locoregional control, overall survival, cancer-specific survival, locoregional recurrence-free survival, and distant metastasis-free survival. No grade 4 acute or late toxicity was observed.
Late xerostomia was observed in 26 patients (9.8%) with Grade I–II severity, and only one patient (0.4%) developed Grade III xerostomia. Overall survival (OS) rates were 95.9% at 1 year, 86.8% at 3 years, and 81.6% at 5 years. Cancer-specific survival (CSS) was 98.1% at 1 year, 92.6% at 3 years, and 90.2% at 5 years. Locoregional recurrence-free survival was 92.1% at 5 years, with a locoregional recurrence rate of 7.5%.
Age was significantly associated with survival outcomes, with p-values of 0.01 for both overall survival and cancer-specific survival. The study did not report serious adverse events, discontinuations, or general tolerability metrics. Key limitations include the prospective cohort design, which precludes definitive causal conclusions regarding the intervention's efficacy compared to other modalities. The practice relevance suggests that comprehensive salivary gland-sparing helical tomotherapy reduces radiation-induced xerostomia without compromising locoregional control or survival, supporting its oncologic safety in NPC radiotherapy.