Reduced symptoms of late radiation tissue injury of the vagina after treatment with hyperbaric oxygen therapy: A retrospective analysis of 19 patients | Canada Hyperbarics
Retrospective Study Gynecol Oncol 2025

Reduced symptoms of late radiation tissue injury of the vagina after treatment with hyperbaric oxygen therapy: A retrospective analysis of 19 patients

Möring M, Valkenburg A, Schuur-Van't Hof N, van Beekhuizen H, Lansdorp C — Gynecol Oncol, 2025

Tier 2 — Indexed

Automatically imported from PubMed based on relevance criteria.

Summary

What Researchers Did

Dutch researchers retrospectively analyzed 19 patients with late radiation tissue injury of the vagina, occurring after pelvic radiation for cervical and other cancers, who received an average of 40 HBOT sessions (80 minutes at 2.5 ATA).

What They Found

15 of 19 patients (79%) responded to HBOT, with a median of 3 symptoms improving per patient. Symptoms most responsive were ulceration (89% improved), dyspareunia or painful sex (82%), pain (71%), and anatomical changes like stenosis and fibrosis (80%). Responses were maintained at 3-month follow-up in 14 of 15 responders, and no major adverse events occurred.

What This Means for Canadian Patients

For Canadian women experiencing ongoing vaginal pain, dryness, bleeding, or scarring years after pelvic radiation for cervical or uterine cancer, HBOT offers a realistic chance of meaningful symptom improvement. These gains represent significant quality-of-life benefits for a condition that is often undertreated or not discussed with oncologists.

Canadian Relevance

OHIP covers HBOT for radiation proctitis and radiation cystitis in Ontario. Vaginal late radiation injury shares the same mechanism as these covered conditions, and patients should ask their gynecologic oncologist whether coverage may apply.

Study Limitations

This retrospective study of 19 patients had no control group, and symptom improvement was partly based on patient self-report, which introduces potential bias.

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Study Details

Study Type Retrospective Study
Category Radiation Injury
Source Pubmed
PubMed ID 40267557
Year Published 2025
Journal Gynecol Oncol
MeSH Terms Humans; Female; Hyperbaric Oxygenation; Retrospective Studies; Vagina; Adult; Middle Aged; Radiation Injuries; Quality of Life; Aged

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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.