Completion rates and myelosuppression degrees of cancer patients receiving radiotherapy or chemoradiotherapy unchanged regardless of delay duration after Omicron infection
Zhenyu Zhang, Juan Zhou, Xun Peng, Ping Li, Xue Meng, Man Hu, Miaoqing Zhao, Qinghai Lin, Kun Ru

TL;DR
This study found that Omicron infection in cancer patients undergoing radiotherapy or chemoradiotherapy did not affect treatment completion or myelosuppression, regardless of treatment delay.
Contribution
The study reveals that treatment outcomes remain stable despite Omicron infection and treatment delay in cancer patients.
Findings
Omicron infection caused inflammation and organ injury in cancer patients.
Delaying treatment after infection did not impact therapy completion or myelosuppression.
Severe Omicron cases were more common when treatment was delayed more than 10 days.
Abstract
This study aimed to investigate impacts of Omicron infection on cancer patients in China. A retrospective study was conducted, including 347 cancer patients undergoing radiotherapy or chemoradiotherapy between July 2022 and March 2023. Three groups involved: 108 patients without SARS-CoV-2 infection (non-COVID-19 group), 102 patients beginning treatment 10 days after first SARS-CoV-2 infection (≥ 10 days COVID-19 group), and 137 patients beginning treatment less than 10 days after first SARS-CoV-2 infection (< 10 days COVID-19 group). SAA, hsCRP, ALT, etc., were used to assess COVID-19 infection. Serum levels of SAA, hsCRP and IL-6 were all raised in two COVID-19-infected groups (SAA < 0.01, hsCRP < 0.01, IL-6 < 0.05), but PCT, ALT, LDH and HBDH levels were only elevated in ≥ 10 days COVID-19 group (PCT = 0.0478, ALT = 0.0022, LDH = 0.0313, HBDH = 0.0077). Moreover, moderate and severe…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCOVID-19 and healthcare impacts · COVID-19 Clinical Research Studies · Neutropenia and Cancer Infections
