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©The Author(s) 2016.
World J Gastroenterol. Aug 21, 2016; 22(31): 6972-6986
Published online Aug 21, 2016. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v22.i31.6972
Published online Aug 21, 2016. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v22.i31.6972
Table 1 Modified radiation therapy oncology group rectal toxicity scale
| Clinical summary | Symptom and intervention | |
| Grade 0 | No impact | No discernable symptoms or intervention |
| Grade 1 | Mild and self-limiting | Minimal, infrequent bleeding or clear mucus discharge, rectal discomfort not requiring analgesics, loose stools not requiring medications |
| Grade 2 | Managed conservatively, lifestyle (performance status) not affected | Intermittent rectal bleeding not requiring regular use of pads, erythema of rectal lining on proctoscopy, diarrhea requiring medications |
| Grade 3 | Severe, alters patient lifestyle | Rectal bleeding requiring regular use of pads and minor surgical intervention, rectal pain requiring narcotics, rectal ulceration |
| Grade 4 | Life threatening and disabling | Bowel obstruction, fistula formation, bleeding requiring hospitalization, surgical intervention required |
| Grade 5 | Death | Death directly related to radiation effects |
Table 2 Comparison of acute vs chronic radiation proctitis
| Acute proctitis | Chronic proctitis | |
| Symptom development | ≤ 3 mo from start of radiation | > 3 mo from start of radiation to years later |
| Incidence | Common (50%-100%) | Less common (2%-20%) |
| Common symptoms | Diarrhea, urgency, pain | Rectal bleeding |
| Rare symptoms | Significant rectal bleeding | Stricture, obstruction, fistula |
| Histopathology | Epithelial cell depletion with inflammatory infiltrate | Small vessel changes without inflammatory infiltrate |
| Treatment | Conservative, medical | Conservative, medical, endoscopic, surgical |
Table 3 Non-endoscopic medical therapy for radiation proctitis
| Proposed mechanism | Indications | |
| Sucralfate | Protection from injury | RCT supports treatment of chronic proctitis |
| Metronidazole | Antibiotic/Immunomodulator | RCT supports treatment of chronic proctitis |
| 5-aminosalicylic acid derivatives | Anti-inflammatory | Mixed results |
| Probiotics/antioxidants | Immunomodulator/free radical scavenger | Mixed results, but with minimal side effects |
| Butyrate | Colonocyte nutrient | RCT supports treatment of acute proctitis |
| Topical formalin | Coagulative necrosis | Effective for chronic proctitis though significant morbidity |
| Hyperbaric oxygen | Promotes angiogenesis and healing | RCT supports treatment of chronic proctitis |
Table 4 Endoscopic therapy for radiation proctitis
| Proposed mechanism | Indications | |
| Dilatation | Mechanical | Single institution studies support treatment of stricture, no RCT to date |
| Bipolar cautery and heater probe | Thermoelectric cauterization | RTC supports treatment of chronic proctitis |
| Nd:YAG, KTP laser | Coherent wavelength of electromagnetic radiation | Single institution studies support treatment of chronic proctitis, no RCT to date |
| Radiofrequency ablation | Rapidly alternating radiofrequency waves | Single institution studies support treatment of chronic proctitis, no RCT to date |
| Argon plasma coagulation | Noncontact electrocoagulation | RTC supports treatment of chronic proctitis, largest amount of data |
Table 5 Surgical therapy for radiation proctitis
| Proposed mechanism | Indications | |
| Diverting ostomy | Diversion of fecal stream allows for healing | Single institution studies support treatment of chronic radiation proctitis if refractory to medical and endoscopic measures, moderate morbidity and mortality associated |
| Local excision/flap reconstruction | Removal of poorly vascularized tissue and replacement with well perfused tissue | Little data exists to support the routine use of excision and reconstruction for patients with radiation proctitis |
| Proctectomy/exenteration | Removal of damaged tissue | Single institution studies support treatment of chronic radiation proctitis if refractory to medical and endoscopic measures, significant morbidity and mortality associated |
- Citation: Weiner JP, Wong AT, Schwartz D, Martinez M, Aytaman A, Schreiber D. Endoscopic and non-endoscopic approaches for the management of radiation-induced rectal bleeding. World J Gastroenterol 2016; 22(31): 6972-6986
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/1007-9327/full/v22/i31/6972.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.3748/wjg.v22.i31.6972
