| Literature DB >> 28115933 |
Jessica Paken1, Cyril D Govender1, Mershen Pillay1, Vikash Sewram2.
Abstract
Cisplatin is an effective drug used in the treatment of many cancers, yet its ototoxic potential places cancer patients, exposed to this drug, at risk of hearing loss, thus negatively impacting further on a patient's quality of life. It is paramount for health care practitioners managing such patients to be aware of cisplatin's ototoxic properties and the clinical signs to identify patients at risk of developing hearing loss. English peer-reviewed articles from January 1975 to July 2015 were assessed from PubMed, Science Direct, and Ebscohost. Seventy-nine articles and two books were identified for this review, using MeSH terms and keywords such as "ototoxicity", "cisplatin", "hearing loss", and "ototoxicity monitoring". This review provides an up-to-date overview of cisplatin-associated ototoxicity, namely, its clinical features, incidence rates, and molecular and cellular mechanisms and risk factors, to health care practitioners managing the patient with cancer, and highlights the need for a team-based approach to complement an audiological monitoring programme to mitigate any further loss in the quality of life of affected patients, as there is currently no otoprotective agent recommended routinely for the prevention of cisplatin-associated ototoxicity. It also sets the platform for effective dialogue towards policy formulation and strengthening of health systems in developing countries.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 28115933 PMCID: PMC5223030 DOI: 10.1155/2016/1809394
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Toxicol ISSN: 1687-8191
Search and MeSH terms used in the literature search.
| Electronic database | Search term | MeSH term |
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| PubMed (Medline) | Ototoxicity [All Fields] AND monitoring [All Fields] | ((“cisplatin” [MeSH Terms] OR “cisplatin” [All Fields]) AND ototoxicity [All Fields]) OR ((“cisplatin” [MeSH Terms] OR “cisplatin” [All Fields]) AND (“hearing loss” [MeSH Terms] OR (“hearing” [All Fields] AND “loss” [All Fields]) OR “hearing loss” [All Fields])) |
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| Science Direct | “cisplatin ototoxicity” or “cisplatin hearing loss” “ototoxicity monitoring” | |
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| Ebscohost | Cisplatin ototoxicity or cisplatin hearing loss | |
Figure 1Mechanisms of cisplatin ototoxicity REF 1 [16–20], REF 2 [17, 21], and REF 3 [22–24].
Studies reflecting cisplatin-associated hearing loss in adults.
| Study | Country | Type of study | Audiological tests conducted | Patient population | Number of patients who developed ototoxicity |
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| Malgonde et al. [ | India | Prospective | Pure tone audiometry (frequencies not specified) and short increment sensitivity index test | 34 patients with head and neck cancers receiving cisplatin containing chemotherapy and concomitant radiation therapy | 34 (100%) |
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| Whitehorn et al. [ | South Africa | Retrospective cross-sectional | Air (0.25–8 kHz) and bone conduction pure tone audiometry | 107 patients receiving cisplatin containing chemotherapy, irrespective of the type of the cancer | 59 (55.1%) |
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| Nitz et al. [ | Germany | Prospective longitudinal trinational population-based | Air (0.125–8 kHz) and bone conduction pure tone audiometry | 1 patient with soft-tissue sarcoma and 16 with osteosarcoma, receiving cisplatin and/or carboplatin containing chemotherapy | 6 (35.3%) |
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| Arora et al. [ | India | Prospective, randomized, observational | Pure tone air (0.25–16 kHz) and bone conduction audiometry | 57 patients receiving cisplatin containing chemotherapy: | — |
| 10 patients (low dose group, carcinoma of the larynx) | 6 (60%) | ||||
| 35 patients (middle dose group, head and neck cancers, carcinoma of the cervix) | 35 (100%) | ||||
| 12 patients (high dose group, carcinoma of the lung and carcinoma of the testis) | 12 (100%) | ||||
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| Dell'Aringa et al. [ | Brazil | Case series | Tympanometry, acoustic reflex threshold testing, distortion product otoacoustic emissions (DPOAEs), air (0.25–8 kHz) and bone conduction pure tone audiometry, speech audiometry | 17 patients with extracranial head and neck cancers receiving cisplatin containing chemotherapy and concomitant radiation therapy | 12 (70.5%), left ears; 11 (64.7%), right ears |
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| Schultz et al. [ | Brazil | Prospective | Full audiometric evaluations, with only air (0.25–8 kHz) and bone conduction pure tone audiometry thresholds computed | 31 patients receiving cisplatin containing chemotherapy, irrespective of the type of cancer | 12 (38%), NCI criteria; 19 (65%), Brock et al.'s criteria; 17 (54%), ASHA criteria; 9 (29%), David and Silverman's criteria |
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| Zuur et al. [ | The Netherlands | Prospective | Air (0.125–16 kHz) and bone conduction pure tone audiometry | 60 patients with locally advanced head and neck cancer, receiving cisplatin containing chemotherapy and concomitant radiation therapy | 19 (31%), up to 8 kHz; 28 (47%), up to 16 kHz |
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| Dutta et al. [ | India | Prospective | Pure tone audiometry (frequencies not specified) | 60 patients receiving cisplatin containing chemotherapy, type of cancer not indicated | 9 (15%) |
| 51, low dose group | 6 (12%) | ||||
| 9, high dose group | 3 (33%) | ||||
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| Strumberg et al. [ | Germany | Retrospective | Pure tone air (0.125–12 kHz) and bone conduction audiometry, transient evoked otoacoustic emissions test (TEOAE) | 32 patients with testicular cancer receiving cisplatin containing chemotherapy | 21 (70%) |
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| Nagy et al. [ | USA | Retrospective | Tympanometry, air (0.25–8 KHz) conduction pure tone audiometry | 53 patients with oesophageal, lung, or head and neck cancer receiving cisplatin containing chemotherapy and concomitant radiation therapy (only for head and neck cancer) | 19 (36%) |
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| Bokemeyer et al. [ | Germany | Retrospective | Pure tone air (0.5–8 kHz) and bone audiometry | 86 patients with testicular cancer receiving cisplatin containing chemotherapy | 57 (66%) |
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| Waters et al. [ | Canada | Retrospective | Pure tone air (0.25–8 kHz) and bone conduction audiometry, immittance audiometry, and speech audiometry | 60 patients with advanced ovarian carcinomas receiving cisplatin containing chemotherapy | |
| 39, low dose, short treatment (25 from LDE group and 14 new cases after treatment modification) | 6 (15%) | ||||
| 8, low dose, blocks | 0 (0%) | ||||
| 25, low dose, extended treatment | 9 (36%) | ||||
| 13, high dose, short treatment | 12 (92%) | ||||
Studies reflecting cisplatin-associated hearing loss in children.
| Study | Country | Type of study | Audiological tests conducted | Patient population | Number of patients who developed ototoxicity |
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| Nitz et al. [ | Germany | Prospective longitudinal trinational population-based | Air (0.125–8 kHz) conduction pure tone audiometry | 93 patients with osteosarcoma and 19 with soft-tissue sarcoma receiving cisplatin and/or carboplatin containing chemotherapy | 55 (49.1%) |
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| Knight et al. [ | USA | Prospective | Otoscopy, tympanometry, pure tone audiometry (0.5–8 kHz), DPOAEs, and ABR | 32 children with different types of cancers treated with cisplatin and/or carboplatin containing chemotherapy | 20 (62.5%) |
| Otoscopy, tympanometry, extended pure tone audiometry (0.5–16 kHz), and DPOAEs | 17 children with different types of cancers treated with cisplatin and/or carboplatin containing chemotherapy | 16 (94.1%) | |||
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| Coradini et al. [ | Brazil | Retrospective | Tympanometry, pure tone audiometry (0.25–8 kHz), TEAOEs, and DPOAEs | 23 children with malignant hepatic tumour, osteosarcoma, and germ cell tumours receiving cisplatin containing chemotherapy | 12 (52%), pure tone; 5 (22%), TEOAEs; 16 (71%), DPOAEs |
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| Bertolini et al. [ | France | Prospective | Otoscopy, immittance audiometry, speech audiometry, play audiometry or free-field audiometry, conventional pure tone audiometry (frequencies not specified), or ABR (depending on the age of the participant) | 102 children with either neuroblastoma, hepatoblastoma, germ cell tumour, or osteosarcoma | — |
| 96 received cisplatin and/or carboplatin containing chemotherapy | 39 (41%) | ||||
| 52 received cisplatin only | 19 (37%) | ||||
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| Stavroulaki et al. [ | Greece | Prospective | Otoscopy, immittance audiometry, pure tone audiometry (0.25–8 kHz), TEOAEs, and DPOAEs | 12 children with either neuroblastoma, osteosarcoma, medulloblastoma, rhabdomyosarcoma, or primitive neuroectodermal tumour receiving cisplatin containing chemotherapy | 6 (50%) |
Figure 2Timelines for audiological assessments [69].
Clinical significance and limitations of HFA and OAEs.
| HFA (>8kHz) | OAEs |
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| (i) HFA is considered to be the most sensitive test to identify ototoxic hearing loss [ | (i) OAES is considered a noninvasive objective measure of cochlear outer hair cell function [ |
| (ii) HFA is not as affected by middle ear pathologies as OAEs [ | (ii) DPOAEs can be regarded as a more sensitive measure for the early detection of hearing loss than conventional pure tone audiometry [ |
| (iii) The criteria of change for ototoxicity is established [ | (iii) OAEs is time efficient [ |
| (iv) DPOAEs provide frequency specific information [ | |
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| (i) HFA is not standardised [ | (i) OAEs are significantly affected by middle ear pathology [ |
| (ii) HFA is not commonly used, due to the need for additional equipment such as circum-aural headphones [ | (ii) There is no universal value for the criteria of change indicating ototoxicity [ |
| (iii) HFA may not always be applicable, as patients with hearing loss in the conventional frequency range may not have measurable hearing in the extended high frequency range [ | (iii) OAEs are absent in patients with moderate degrees of hearing loss [ |
| (iv) Test efficiency may be affected due to HFA being time consuming [ | (iv) OAEs have a limited frequency range (generally up to 8000 Hz) [ |