Prostate cancer management challenges due to COVID-19 in countries with low-to-middle-income economies: A radiation oncology perspective

Abstract Description: The COVID-19 pandemic poses an unprecedented challenge for urologic oncology and radiotherapy. Radiation oncology departments and international collaboration groups are sharing their management adaptations made in response to the pandemic. The present narrative review summarizes the current recommendations. Relevance: There is a need to define which patients are candidates for safe treatment delay until the pandemic is over or controlled, to reduce exposure to the virus in the healthcare personnel and patients. Conclusions: Telemedicine is recommended for follow-up visits. Active surveillance is the preferred treatment for patients with favorable intermediate risk. In greater risk disease, hormone therapy safely postpones radiotherapy up to 7 months. Radiosurgery is suggested in centers that have the necessary technology and previous experience. A moderately hypofractionated regimen is recommended if radiosurgery/ultra-hypofractionation is not available. Hypofractionation should be implemented if image-guided radiation therapy is already in place. Countries with low and middle-income economies face challenges in adopting the recommendations for prostate cancer management during the pandemic. Postponing treatment may result in the overwhelming of radiation oncology center capacity, after the pandemic.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Caicedo-Martínez,María, González-Motta,Alejandro, Gil-Quiñones,Sebastián R, Galvis,Juan Carlos
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Sociedad Mexicana de Urología 2020
Online Access:http://www.scielo.org.mx/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S2007-40852020000400008
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