Meta-Analysis 2023
From the library

Hyperbaric oxygen therapy for late radiation tissue injury

Lin et al.

Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews n = 753 2.4 ATA 30 sessions
Plain English

Lin et al. 2023 is the most recent Cochrane Database update on HBOT for late radiation tissue injury (LRTI), succeeding Bennett et al. 2016 (pub4). The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews is the highest-tier evidence framework in clinical medicine, and this review pools randomized-trial evidence for HBOT in radiation-induced tissue injuries — most prominently osteoradionecrosis (bone death after head/neck radiation), radiation cystitis (bladder injury after pelvic radiation), and radiation proctitis (rectal injury after pelvic radiation). For accurate effect-size figures from the 2023 update, consult the Cochrane abstract directly via the linked PubMed entry; the prior site copy mixed numbers from earlier pub4 summaries and is being verified.

Key findings

What the trial documented.

  • Cochrane systematic review of HBOT for late radiation tissue injury (LRTI)
  • Pooled evidence supports HBOT for osteoradionecrosis, radiation cystitis, and radiation proctitis
  • Updated 2023 review extends and supersedes Bennett 2016 (pub4)

This is the 2023 Cochrane review of hyperbaric oxygen for late radiation tissue injury (LRTI) — the third update of a review first published in 2005 and revised in 2012 and 2016. It is the most current synthesis of randomized evidence on the topic.

What the study looked at

Cochrane reviews pool data from randomized controlled trials using a standardized, transparent methodology. This review evaluated the benefits and harms of HBOT for treating or preventing LRTI — tissue damage that can emerge months or years after radiotherapy, such as osteoradionecrosis and soft-tissue injury.

What it found

The review found evidence that HBOT can improve outcomes for certain late radiation injuries (for example, in some head-and-neck and pelvic tissues and around dental/surgical procedures), while noting that the evidence is not uniform across all injury types and that some comparisons remain uncertain.

How strong is the evidence?

As a Cochrane systematic review, this is among the highest tiers of clinical evidence. Late radiation tissue injury is one of the recognized clinical indications for HBOT. This review updates the earlier Bennett 2016 version — see also our entry on that review.

Related on Saturate

See our evidence overview of HBOT in cancer survivorship.

Source

Lin ZC, et al. (2023). Hyperbaric oxygen therapy for late radiation tissue injury. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. doi.org/10.1002/14651858.CD005005.pub5 · PubMed

This content is for educational purposes only and is not medical advice. Hyperbaric oxygen therapy carries genuine clinical risks; consult a qualified clinician. Read our full medical disclaimer.

Protocol used

Range across included Cochrane review trials — typically 2.0–2.4 ATA, 100% oxygen, 90-minute sessions

Full citation

Lin et al.. Hyperbaric oxygen therapy for late radiation tissue injury. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. 2023.

Medical disclaimer

This content is for educational purposes only and is not medical advice. Hyperbaric oxygen therapy carries genuine clinical risks; consult a qualified clinician before starting any protocol. Full disclaimer →