| Literature DB >> 26523246 |
Sali Al-Ansari1, Judith A E M Zecha2, Andrei Barasch3, Jan de Lange2, Fred R Rozema4, Judith E Raber-Durlacher5.
Abstract
Oral mucositis induced by conventional cytotoxic cancer therapies is a common and significant clinical problem in oncology. Mucositis symptoms, which include severe pain, may lead to dose reductions and unplanned interruptions of chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy, and often affect patients' quality of life. In addition, ulcerative mucositis represents a risk factor for local or systemic infectious complications that may be life-threatening in immunosuppressed patients. The development of biologically based targeted cancer therapies, which aim to block the growth, spread, and survival of tumors by interfering with specific molecular targets, may have reduced mucosal injury, but did not eliminate it. This article will review the epidemiology, pathobiology, and management of oral mucositis associated with conventional cytotoxic therapies for malignant diseases and will briefly summarize emerging information on oral mucosal injury associated with targeted therapies. Considerations for future research aimed at the development of more efficient and effective supportive care approaches will be presented, with emphasis on the contribution of dental researchers and clinicians in these efforts.Entities:
Keywords: Chemotherapy; Cytotoxic cancer therapy; Mucositis management; Oral mucositis; Radiation therapy; Stomatitis; Targeted therapies
Year: 2015 PMID: 26523246 PMCID: PMC4623065 DOI: 10.1007/s40496-015-0069-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Oral Health Rep
Fig. 1Clinical differences in onset, severity, and resolution of chemotherapy- and radiation-induced oral mucositis. In some patients treated with radiotherapy, oral mucositis may last for longer periods and may become chronic. Hyperfractionated radiotherapy, combined chemoradiation regimens, or radiotherapy combined with a targeted agent may lead to increased mucositis severity (not depicted)
Multinational Association for Supportive Care in Cancer/International Society for Oral Oncology (MASCC/ISOO) Clinical Practice Guidelines for Oral Mucositis. Modified from [78]
| Intervention/mode of administration | Purpose | Cancer treatment | Level of evidence |
|---|---|---|---|
| Recommendations IN FAVOR of an intervention (strong evidence supports effectiveness in the treatment setting listed): | |||
| Oral cryotherapy for 30 minutes | Prevention of OM | Patients receiving bolus 5-fluorouracil chemotherapy | Level II |
| Recombinant human keratinocyte growth factor-1 (palifermin) at a dose of 60 μg/kg per day for 3 days prior to conditioning treatment and for 3 days after transplant | Prevention of OM | Patients receiving high-dose chemotherapy and TBI, followed by autologous stem cell transplantation, for a hematological malignancy | Level II |
| Low-level laser therapy (wavelength at 650 nm, power of 40 mW, and each square centimeter treated with the required time to a tissue energy dose of 2 J/cm2) | Prevention of OM | Patients receiving HSCT conditioned with high-dose chemotherapy, with or without TBI | Level II |
| Patient-controlled analgesia with morphine | Pain reduction | Patients undergoing HSCT | Level II |
| Benzydamine mouthwash | Prevention of OM | Patients with HNC receiving moderate dose radiation therapy (up to 50 Gy), without concomitant chemotherapy | Level II |
| Suggestions IN FAVOR of an intervention (weaker evidence supports effectiveness in the treatment setting listed): | |||
| Oral care protocols | Prevention of OM | All age groups and across all cancer treatment modalities | Level III |
| Oral cryotherapy | Prevention of OM | Patients receiving high-dose melphalan, with or without TBI, as conditioning for HSCT | Level III |
| Low-level laser therapy (wavelength around 632.8 nm) | Prevention of OM | Patients undergoing radiotherapy, without concomitant chemotherapy, for HNC | Level III |
| Transdermal fentanyl | Pain reduction | Patients receiving conventional or high-dose chemotherapy, with or without TBI | Level III |
| 2 % morphine mouthwash | Pain reduction | Patients receiving chemoradiation for HNC | Level III |
| 0.5 % doxepin mouthwash | Pain reduction | All patients with OM-induced pain | Level IV |
| Systemic zinc supplements administered orally | Prevention of OM | HNC patients receiving radiation therapy or chemoradiation | Level III |
| Recommendations AGAINST interventions (strong evidence indicates lack of effectiveness in the treatment setting listed): | |||
| PTA (polymyxin, tobramycin, amphotericin B) and BCoG (bacitracin, clotrimazole, gentamicin) | Prevention of OM | Patients receiving radiation therapy for HNC | Level II |
| Iseganan antimicrobial mouthwash | Prevention of OM | Patients receiving high-dose chemotherapy, with or without TBI, for HSCT or in patients receiving radiation therapy or concomitant chemoradiation for HNC | Level II |
| Iseganan antimicrobial mouthwash | Prevention of OM | Patients receiving high-dose chemotherapy, with or without TBI, for HSCT or in patients receiving radiation therapy or concomitant chemoradiation for HNC | Level II |
| Sucralfate mouthwash | Prevention of OM | Patients receiving chemotherapy for cancer (I), or inpatients receiving radiation therapy (I) or concomitant chemoradiation (II) for HNC | Level I, II |
| Sucralfate mouthwash | Treatment of OM | Patients receiving chemotherapy for cancer (I), or in patients receiving radiation therapy (II) for HNC | Level I, II |
| Intravenous glutamine | Prevention of OM | Patients receiving high-dose chemotherapy, with or without TBI, for HSCT | Level II |
| Suggestions AGAINST interventions (weaker evidence indicates lack of effectiveness in the treatment setting listed): | |||
| Chlorhexidine mouthwash | Prevention of OM | Patients receiving radiation therapy for HNC | Level III |
| Granulocyte-macrophage-colony-stimulating factor mouthwash | Prevention of OM | Patients receiving high-dose chemotherapy, for autologous or allogeneic HSCT | Level II |
| Misoprostol mouthwash | Prevention of OM | Patients receiving radiation therapy for HNC | Level III |
| Systemic pentoxifylline, administered orally | Prevention of OM | Patients undergoing HSCT | Level III |
| Systemic pilocarpine, administered orally | Prevention of OM | Patients receiving radiation therapy for head and neck cancer (III), or patients receiving high-dose chemotherapy, with or without TBI, for HSCT (II) | Level II, III |
OM oral mucositis, μg microgram, kg kilogram, nm nanometer, mW milliwatt, J Joule, cm centimeter, Gy Gray, HSCT hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, TBI total body irradiation, HNC head and neck cancer