Efficacy and safety of hyperbaric oxygen therapy for radiation-induced dermatitis in patients with breast cancer: a randomized pilot study | Canada Hyperbarics
RCT Support Care Cancer 2025

Efficacy and safety of hyperbaric oxygen therapy for radiation-induced dermatitis in patients with breast cancer: a randomized pilot study

Lee J, Hyun M, Yang G, Lee S — Support Care Cancer, 2025

Tier 1 — Curated

Manually reviewed and included in the Canada Hyperbarics research database.

Summary

What Researchers Did

Korean researchers ran a small randomized controlled trial with 30 breast cancer patients to test whether HBOT (100% oxygen at 1.5 ATA for 30 minutes, three times per week for 7 weeks) could reduce radiation-caused skin damage during adjuvant radiotherapy.

What They Found

Severe skin reactions (Grade 2 or higher) occurred in 73.3% of both the HBOT and control groups — no statistically significant difference. However, HBOT was well tolerated with no serious side effects, and there were non-significant trends toward less skin discomfort and better quality of life in the HBOT group.

What This Means for Canadian Patients

Thousands of Canadian breast cancer patients receive radiation each year, and skin reactions are a common side effect. This small pilot trial could not confirm that HBOT prevents radiation dermatitis, but it confirmed safety, suggesting larger trials at higher pressures are worth pursuing.

Canadian Relevance

Delayed radiation injury is an OHIP-covered indication for HBOT in Ontario, though this study focused on acute radiation dermatitis during treatment rather than delayed effects.

Study Limitations

The study enrolled only 25 patients who completed the protocol, and the HBOT pressure used (1.5 ATA) was lower than the standard 2.0–2.4 ATA used in most hyperbaric centres, which may have reduced the treatment's effectiveness.

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Study Details

Study Type RCT
Category Radiation Injury
Source Pubmed
PubMed ID 40259026
Year Published 2025
Journal Support Care Cancer
MeSH Terms Humans; Hyperbaric Oxygenation; Pilot Projects; Female; Breast Neoplasms; Middle Aged; Radiodermatitis; Quality of Life; Aged; Adult; Radiotherapy, Adjuvant; Severity of Illness Index; Treatment Outcome; Feasibility Studies

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Disclaimer: This study summary is provided for informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute medical advice. The information presented reflects the findings of the original research authors and may not represent the views of Canada Hyperbarics. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before making treatment decisions.