HIV-positive head and neck cancer patients respond well to radiation therapy treatments and experience similar toxicity rates as non-HIV-positive patients, despite prior reports to the contrary, according to a study in the January issue of the International Journal of Radiation Oncology·Biology·Physics, an official journal of the American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO).
Patients with HIV have a significantly higher risk of developing some  types of cancers; however, since the use of highly active antiretroviral therapy  (HAART) began in the mid-1990s, the instances of AIDS-related cancer have  greatly decreased. This has alternately caused a higher incidence of these  patients developing non-AIDS-related cancers, including those originating from  the head and neck.
Radiation therapy constitutes a current standard  treatment for head and neck cancer, but there has been very little investigation  into how radiation therapy affects HIV-positive patients. Traditionally,  aggressive treatment such as radiation therapy has been used sparingly in this  population due to concerns regarding acute and late complications. This newly  presented research sought to determine the feasibility of radiation therapy and  the likelihood of cure for HIV-positive patients with head and neck  cancer.
The three-year estimates of overall survival and local-regional  control were 78 percent and 92 percent, respectively. Grade 3+ toxicity was  reported by 58 percent of patients, but this did not appear worse than the  standard rate seen in HIV-negative patients. 
The researchers did note  that 75 percent of patients studied were receiving HAART therapy at the time of  treatment. Also, all patients underwent dental prophylaxis and gastrostomy tube  placement before beginning therapy, which may have played a role in the toxicity  levels remaining comparable to HIV-negative patients.  Dental prophylaxis,  gastrostomy tubes, and monitoring of CD4 counts are recommended in these  patients to minimize treatment complications.
"It is clear that  HIV-positive patients tolerated primary radiation therapy for head-and-neck  cancer without excessive toxicity or exaggerated tissue reactions," Allen Chen,  M.D., senior author of the study and training program director at the University  of California Davis Cancer Center in Sacramento, California, said. "With  HIV-positive patients living longer than ever before and therefore developing  cancers unrelated to their HIV, these studies are important to ensure that we  are treating these patients for cancer in a way that provides them with the best  possible outcomes."
Source: ASTRO