| Literature DB >> 25400667 |
Kohichi Yamauchi1, Yasunao Kogashiwa1, Yorihisa Moro1, Naoyuki Kohno1.
Abstract
Purpose. One of the common side effects experienced by head and neck cancer patients on chemoradiotherapy is mucositis. Severe mucositis may be controllable by limiting cancer therapy, but it has resulted in decreasing the completion rate of chemoradiotherapy. The efficacy of royal jelly (RJ) as prophylaxis against chemoradiotherapy-induced mucositis was evaluated through clinical scoring of oral and pharyngeal mucositis. Methods. In this randomized, single-blind (physician-blind), clinical trial, 13 patients with head and neck cancer requiring chemoradiation were randomly assigned to two groups. Seven patients assigned to the study group received RJ, and 6 patients were assigned to the control group. RJ group patients took RJ three times per day during treatment. The patients in both groups were evaluated twice a week for the development of mucositis using Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events version 3.0. Results. A significant reduction in mucositis was seen among RJ-treated patients compared with controls (P < 0.001). Conclusion. This study demonstrated that prophylactic use of RJ was effective in reducing mucositis induced by chemoradiotherapy in head and neck cancer patients. However, further studies are needed because of the small sample size and the absence of double blinding.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25400667 PMCID: PMC4221863 DOI: 10.1155/2014/974967
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Otolaryngol ISSN: 1687-9201
Patients' profile.
| Case | Group | Tumor site | Sex | Age (year) | TNM stage | IC | CRT |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | RJ | Larynx | M | 59 | T2N0M0 | — | S-1 |
| 2 | RJ | Oropharynx | M | 84 | T3N2cM0 | — | S-1 |
| 3 | RJ | Hypopharynx | M | 62 | TXN3M0 | S1 + N | N + T |
| 4 | RJ | Hypopharynx | M | 58 | T1N3M0 | S1 + N | N + T |
| 5 | RJ | Larynx | F | 75 | T2N0M0 | — | S-1 |
| 6 | RJ | Oropharynx | M | 65 | T4aN2bM0 | — | CDDP |
| 7 | RJ | Hypopharynx | M | 51 | T2N2bM0 | — | N + T |
| 8 | CONT | Hypopharynx | M | 84 | T2N0M0 | — | S-1 |
| 9 | CONT | Oropharynx | M | 63 | T1N2bM0 | — | N + T |
| 10 | CONT | Oropharynx | M | 62 | T1N2aM0 | — | CDDP |
| 11 | CONT | Oropharynx | M | 65 | T4aN0M0 | S1 + N | N + T |
| 12 | CONT | Hypopharynx | M | 66 | T2N1M0 | S1 + N | S-1 |
| 13 | CONT | Maxillary sinus | M | 78 | T4aN0M0 | — | CDDP |
RJ: royal jelly, CONT: control, M: male, and F: female.
IC: induction chemotherapy.
CRT: chemoradiotherapy.
S1 + N: S1 + nedaplatin.
S1: S-1 regimen.
N + T: Weekly nedaplatin and docetaxel regimen.
CDDP: Cisplatin regimen.
Figure 1Grades of mucositis. Each data point represents the mean ± SD. Mann-Whitney U test: * P < 0.001 versus control. RTX: radiotherapy.
Figure 2Time to progress to G2 mucositis. Each data point represents the mean ± SD. Mann-Whitney U test: * P < 0.001 versus control.
Figure 3Time to progress to G3 mucositis. Each data point represents the mean ± SD. Mann-Whitney U test: * P < 0.001 versus control.