| Literature DB >> 28589080 |
Osama Muhammad Maria1,2,3, Nicoletta Eliopoulos3,4, Thierry Muanza1,2,3,5.
Abstract
Radiation-induced oral mucositis (RIOM) is a major dose-limiting toxicity in head and neck cancer patients. It is a normal tissue injury caused by radiation/radiotherapy (RT), which has marked adverse effects on patient quality of life and cancer therapy continuity. It is a challenge for radiation oncologists since it leads to cancer therapy interruption, poor local tumor control, and changes in dose fractionation. RIOM occurs in 100% of altered fractionation radiotherapy head and neck cancer patients. In the United Sates, its economic cost was estimated to reach 17,000.00 USD per patient with head and neck cancers. This review will discuss RIOM definition, epidemiology, impact and side effects, pathogenesis, scoring scales, diagnosis, differential diagnosis, prevention, and treatment.Entities:
Keywords: chemotherapy; mesenchymal stromal/stem cells; normal tissue injury; oral mucositis; pathobiology; radiation; radiotherapy
Year: 2017 PMID: 28589080 PMCID: PMC5439125 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2017.00089
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1Pathobiology of oral mucositis (OM) (. Sonis has suggested five stages (phases) of OM injury induced by radiotherapy (RT) and/or chemotherapy (CT): initiation, signaling, amplification, ulceration, and healing. The pathogenesis of each phase is illustrated.
Figure 4World Health Organization’s Oral Toxicity Scale. Republished with the permission of Dr. Patrick Stiff, Loyola University Medical Center, Maywood, IL, USA.
Figure 5Differential diagnosis of radiation-induced oral mucositis. Republished with the permission of Dr. Patrick Stiff, Loyola University Medical Center, Maywood, IL, USA. (A) Local, denture-related lesion, (B) aphthous ulcer, (C) oral mucositis, and (D) oral thrush.
Data analysis for RIOM predictors using IBM SPSS version 21.0 (Armonk, NY, USA) (.
| Variable | Coef. | SE | z | 95% conf. interval | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Treatment type (RT vs. CCRT) | 0.145 | 0.06 | 5.65 | 0.017 | 0.03 | 0.26 |
| Cumulative RT dose (cGy) | 0.000 | 0.03 | 16.47 | 0.001 | −0.00 | 0.01 |
| Smoking (no vs. yes) | 0.090 | 0.03 | 8.52 | 0.004 | 0.03 | 0.15 |
| Body mass index | −0.005 | 0.01 | 4.56 | 0.033 | −0.10 | 0.00 |
| Time | 0.417 | 0.09 | 23.56 | 0.001 | 0.25 | 0.59 |
| Intercept | −0.277 | 0.17 | 2.72 | 0.099 | −0.61 | 0.05 |
| Treatment type (RT vs. CCRT) | 1.618 | 0.49 | 10.76 | 0.001 | 0.65 | 2.59 |
| Cumulative RT dose (cGy) | 0.003 | 0.01 | 4.03 | 0.045 | −0.01 | −0.01 |
| Smoking (no vs. yes) | 1.759 | 0.41 | 18.50 | 0.000 | 0.96 | 2.56 |
| Body mass index | −0.002 | 0.05 | 0.00 | 0.973 | −0.09 | 0.09 |
| Time | 1.338 | 1.34 | 2.57 | 0.109 | −0.48 | 4.77 |
| Intercept | 6.023 | 2.77 | 4.74 | 0.030 | 0.60 | 11.45 |
Significant predictors for RIOM.
Significant predictors for the prevalence of severe RIOM (CCRT, cumulative radiation dose, smoking, and low BMI) and the symptoms of RIOM in a longitudinal study of patients with oral cavity cancer among head and neck patients (CCRT, cumulative radiation dose, and smoking).
CCRT, concomitant chemoradiotherapy; RIOM, radiation-induced oral mucositis.
Patient-linked factors leading to increased risk for oral mucositis (OM) (.
| Age | Increased risk in very young age (high cell turnover rate) and old age (slower healing rate) |
| Gender | Trends to increased risk in females |
| Oral health and hygiene | Maintaining good oral hygiene and oral health lowers radiation-induced oral mucositis (RIOM) risk |
| Salivary secretory function | Decreased saliva leads to increased RIOM risk |
| Genetic factors | Potential for high RIOM risk in certain individuals still to be identified |
| Body mass index | Delayed healing and increased breakdown in malnourished individuals |
| Renal function | Increased mucotoxicity linked with high serum creatinine level (poor renal function) |
| Smoking | Delays the healing |
| Previous cancer treatment | History of mucositis due to previous cancer treatment increases the risk |
Signaling pathways involved in the development of mucositis (.
| B-cells receptor signaling |
| Cell cycle: G2/M DNA damage checkpoint receptor |
| Death receptor signaling |
| Glutamate receptor signaling |
| Interleukin-6 signaling |
| Integrin signaling |
| Nuclear factor-κB signaling |
| Nitrogen metabolism |
| PI3K/AKT signaling |
| P38 mitogen-activated protein kinase signaling |
| SAPK/JNK signaling |
| Toll-like receptor signaling |
| Vascular endothelial growth factor signaling |
| Wnt/B-catenin signaling |
Figure 2Redding’s summary of RT and/or chemotherapy (CT)-induced oral mucositis pathobiology (. Redding has summarized the pathobiology phases of radiation-induced oral mucositis induced by RT and/or CT. In brief, initiation phase with RT and/or CT results in direct and lethal DNA damage, which leads to release of reactive oxygen species (ROS) from epithelial, vascular endothelial, fibroblasts, and tissue macrophages with cycles of amplifications. Within such primary damage response, the DNA damage and ROS lead to three major steps: (1) fibronectin breakdown that activates macrophages ending with stimulation of matrix metalloproteinase; (2) nuclear factor-κB (NF-κB) activation that stimulates the gene expression and release of pro-inflammatory cytokines, e.g., TNF-α, interleukin (IL)-1β, and IL-6; and (3) ceramide pathway through sphingomyelinase and ceramide synthase. The result will be more tissue injury and stimulated apoptosis. During the signal amplification phase, there is restimulation of tissue damage and apoptosis by the major pro-inflammatory cytokines (TNF-α, IL-1β, and IL-6), NF-κB-mediated gene expression, and ceramide and caspase pathways. During the ulceration and loss of the protective barrier, secondary infection adds more pro-inflammatory reactions and complicates the already existing inflammation before the healing phase starts by matrix signaling to basal epithelial cells to migrate, proliferate, and differentiate. Republished with the permission of Dr. Redding. (A) Initial phase, (B) primary damage phase, (C) signal amplification phase, and (D) ulcerative phase.
Figure 3Signal amplification during OM induced by RT and/or CT (. Signal amplification during RT- and/or CT-induced OM is mediated by activation of NF-κB that is reactivated by IL-1β. NF-κB induces the expression of genes responsible for the MAPK, COX-2, and tyrosine kinase pathways to finally activate the MMP1 and MMP3 signaling at the injured tissue cells. TNF-α, tumor necrosis factor-α; IL-1β, interleukin-1β; NF-κB, nuclear factor-κB; MAPK, mitogen-activated protein kinase; COX-2, cyclooxegenase-2; MMP1, matrix metalloproteinase 1; MMP3, matrix metalloproteinase 3; OM, oral mucositis; CT, chemotherapy. Republished with the permission of Dr. Sonis.
Comparison of OM scoring scales (.
| Grade | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| WHO | None | Soreness ± erythema | Erythema, ulcers, and patient can swallow solid food | Ulcers with extensive erythema and patient cannot swallow solid food | mucositis to the extent that alimentation is not possible |
| RTOG | None | Erythema of the mucosa | Patchy reaction <1.5 cm, non-contiguous | Confluent reaction >1.5 cm, contiguous | Necrosis or deep ulceration, ±bleeding |
| WCCNR | Lesions: none | Lesions: 1–4 | Lesions: >4 | Lesions: coalescing | N/A |
| Color: pink | Color: slight red | Color: moderate red | Color: very red | ||
| Bleeding: none | Bleeding: N/A | Bleeding: spontaneous | Bleeding: spontaneous |
WHO, World Health Organization; RTOG, Radiation Therapy Oncology Group; WCCNR, Western Consortium for Cancer Nursing Research; OM, oral mucositis.
Toxicity grading of oral mucositis (OM) according to World Health Organization (WHO) and National Cancer Institute Common Toxicity Criteria (NCI-CTC) criteria (.
| Side effect | Grade 0 (none) | Grade 1 (mild) | Grade 2 (moderate) | Grade 3 (severe) | Grade 4 (life threatening) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| WHO oral mucositis (stomatitis) | None | Oral soreness, erythema | Oral erythema, ulcers, can eat solids | Oral ulcers, requires liquid diet only | Oral alimentation not possible |
| NCI-CTC chemotherapy-induced stomatitis/pharyngitis (oral/pharyngeal mucositis) | None | Painless ulcers, erythema, or mild soreness in the absence of lesions | Painful erythema, edema, or ulcers, but can eat or swallow | Painful erythema, edema, or ulcers requiring intravenous hydration | Severe ulceration or requires parenteral or enteral nutritional support or prophylactic intubation |
| NCI-CTC mucositis due to radiation | None | Erythema of the mucosa | Patchy pseudomembranous reaction (patches generally ≤1.5 cm in diameter and non-contiguous) | Confluent pseudomembranous reaction (contiguous patches generally >1.5 cm in diameter) | Necrosis or deep ulceration; may include bleeding not induced by minor trauma or abrasion |
| NCI-CTC stomatitis/pharyngitis (oral/pharyngeal mucositis) for bone marrow transplantation studies | None | Painless ulcers, erythema, or mild soreness in the absence of lesions | Painful erythema, edema, or ulcers, but can swallow | Painful erythema, edema, or ulcers preventing swallowing or requiring hydration or parenteral (or enteral) nutritional support | Severe ulceration requiring prophylactic intubation or resulting in documented aspiration pneumonia |
.
Oral assessment guide (.
| Item/grade | 1 | 2 | 3 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Voice | Normal | Deeper or raspy | Difficulty talking |
| Swallow | Normal | Some pain | Unable to swallow |
| Lips | Smooth pink and moist | Dry or cracked | Ulcerated or bleeding |
| Tongue | Pink and moist | Coated and shiny ± red | Blistered or cracked |
| Saliva | Watery | Thick | Absent |
| Mucus membrane | Pink and moist | Red and coated without ulcers | Ulcers |
| Gingiva | Pink and firm | Edematous ± redness | Spontaneous or pressure-induced bleeding |
| Teeth/denture areas | Clean, no debris | Plaque and localized debris | Generalized plaque or debris |
Differential diagnosis of RIOM (.
| Disease/injury | Cause | Clinical presentation/lab findings | Severity | Treatment options |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oral mucositis | Chemotherapy and radiation therapy | Diffuse redness, ulcerations, and pain, particularly in areas where teeth abut tissue | Varies; in BMT setting up to 98% have grade 3/4 | Palliative rinses, narcotics, palifermin in the BMT setting |
| Aphthous stomatitis | Etiology not identified | Single painful ulcer | Localized, but painful; maximum grade 2 | Topical |
| Herpetic mucositis | HSV1 | Usually several spots; ulcerative | Usually grade 1–2 | Acyclovir, valacyclovir, foscarnet |
| Oral thrush | Candida | Varies from painless to mild soreness; whitish plaques | Usually grade 0–1 | Nystatin rinses; fluconazole and other azoles |
| Denture/oral trauma | Dentures | Common in elderly patients with loose-fitting dentures | Can limit calories | Repair, removal of dentures |
| Gangrenous stomatitis | Bacterial infections | Necrotic pseudomembranes | Rare, can be severe | Antibacterials that treat oral aerobes and anaerobes |
| Acute necrotizing stomatitis | Bacterial infections in immune-deficient patients | Pain, fever, necrotic, bloody ulcers | Grade 3/4 | Control of infection |
BMT, bone marrow transplantation; RIOM, radiation-induced oral mucositis; HSV1, herpes simplex virus type 1.
Multinational Association for Supportive Care in Cancer/International Society for Oral Oncology (MASCC/ISOO) Clinical Practice Guidelines for oral mucositis (.
| Intervention/mode of administration | Purpose | Cancer treatment | Level of evidence | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oral cryotherapy for 30 min | 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 | ||
| 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 | ||
| 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 | ||
| 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 and III | ||
OM, oral mucositis; HSCT, hematopoietic stem cell transplantation; TBI, total body irradiation; HNC, head and neck cancer.
Criteria for each level of evidence (.
Level I: evidence obtained from meta-analysis of multiple, well-designed, controlled studies; randomized trials with low false-positive and false-negative errors (high power).
Level II: evidence obtained from at least one well-designed experimental study; randomized trials with high false-positive and/or false-negative errors (low power).
Level III: evidence obtained from well-designed, quasi-experimental studies such as non-randomized, controlled single-group, pretest–posttest comparison, cohort, time, or matched case–control series.
Level IV: evidence obtained from well-designed, non-experimental studies, such as comparative and correlational descriptive and case studies.
Level V: evidence obtained from case reports and clinical examples.
Diet recommended for RIOM patients (.
| Typically accessed diet | Things to avoid | Habits to avoid |
|---|---|---|
| Liquids | Rough food (potato chips, crisps, toast) | Smoking |
| Purees | Spices | Alcohol |
| Ice | Salt | |
| Custards | Acidic fruit (grapefruit, lemon, orange) | |
| Non-acidic fruits (banana, mango, melon, peach) | ||
| Soft cheeses | ||
| Eggs |
Radiation-induced oral mucositis (RIOM) the clinical trials that have been done until 2001 (.
| Injury | Reference | Randomized/controlled/double blind | P/T | Application/doses | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RT | Shieh et al. ( | Yes/yes/no | P | Instructions on oral care | Significant reduction |
| RT | Perch et al. ( | No/no/no | P | Midline mucosa-sparing blocks | Decreased mucositis without affecting tumor control |
| RT | Rugg et al. ( | No/no/no | P | Smoking during RT | Higher mucositis incidence in smokers |
| RT | Scherlacher et al. ( | Yes/yes/no | P | Sucralfate vs. standard oral hygiene | Significant reduction of incidence and severity of mucositis |
| RT | Allison et al. ( | Yes/yes/no | P + T | Sucralfate + fluconazole vs. standard oral care | Significant reduced severity and symptomatic relief |
| RT | Franzen et al. ( | Yes/yes/yes | P | Sucralfate vs. placebo | Significant lower incidence of severe mucositis |
| RT | Makkonen et al. ( | Yes/yes/yes | P | Sucralfate vs. placebo | Only slight protective effect of sucralfate |
| RT | Epstein et al. ( | Yes/yes/yes | P + T | Sucralfate vs. placebo | Non-significant reduction of oral discomfort |
| RT | Meredith et al. ( | Yes/yes/yes | T | Antacid, diphenhydramine, lidocaine ± sucralfate | Non-significant reduction of severity |
| RT | Cengiz et al. ( | Yes/yes/yes | P + T | Sucralfate vs. placebo | Decreased severity |
| RT | Carter et al. ( | Yes/yes/yes | P | Sucralfate vs. placebo | No difference |
| RT | Barker et al. ( | Yes/yes/yes | P + T | Oral hygiene + sucralfate vs. diphenhydramine + kaolin-pectin | No difference |
| RT | Feber et al. ( | Yes/yes/no | P | Hydrogen peroxide vs. saline | Significantly more oral discomfort |
| RT | Spijkervet et al. ( | Yes/yes/yes | P + T | Chlorhexidine vs. placebo | No difference |
| RT | Foote et al. ( | Yes/yes/yes | P + T | Chlorhexidine vs. placebo | Slight aggravation |
| HD-CT + RT | Ferretti et al. ( | Yes/yes/yes | P + T | Chlorhexidine vs. placebo | Significant reduction of incidence and severity in the CT group only |
| CT + RT | Rahn et al. ( | Yes/yes/no | P | Nystatin, rutosides, immuno-globuines, panthenol ± PVP-iodine | Significant reduction |
| CT + RT | Adamietz et al. ( | Yes/yes/no | P | Nystatin, rutosides, immuno-globulines, panthenol ± PVP-iodine | Significant reduction |
| CT + RT | Hasenau et al. ( | No/yes/no | P | Hydrogen peroxide, PVP-iodine, dexpanthenol, nystatin | Lower incidence and severity of oral mucositis |
| RT | Spijkervet et al. ( | No/yes/no | P | Lozenges of polymyxin, tobramycin, amphotericin vs. historical controls | Lower incidence of mucositis |
| RT | Mattews et al. ( | Yes/yes/no | P | Sucralfate + (ciprofloxacin or ampicillin) + clotrimazole vs. sucralfate | Significant reduction of incidence and severity |
| RT | Symonds et al. ( | Yes/yes/yes | P | Pastilles containing polymyxin, tobramycin, amphothericin vs. placebo | Significant reduction of severe mucositis |
| RT | Okuno et al. ( | Yes/yes/yes | P + T | Lozenges of polymyxin, tobramycin, amphotericin vs. placebo | Significant reduction of oral discomfort, no objective difference |
| RT | Okuno et al. ( | Yes/yes/no | T | Amphotericin + colistin + tobramycin + chlorhexidine vs. placebo | Decreased oral discomfort |
| RT | Symonds et al. ( | Yes/yes/yes | P | Amphotericin + tobramycin + polymyxin vs. placebo | Significant reduction of the incidence of sever mucositis |
| RT | Spijkervet et al. ( | No/yes/no | P | Amphotericin + tobramycin + polymyxin vs. historical chlorhexidine or placebo group | Significant reduction of severity of mucositis |
| RT | Carl et al. ( | No/yes/no | P + T | Chamomile vs. historical group | Low incidence of mucositis |
| RT | Fidler et al. ( | Yes/yes/yes | P | Chamomile vs. placebo, cryoprophylaxis in all patients | No difference |
| RT | Abdelaal et al. ( | No/no/no | P | High-dose betamethasone | Impressive prevention of mucositis incidence |
| RT | Kim et al. ( | Yes/yes/yes | P + T | Benzydamine vs. placebo | Significant reduction (less pain) |
| RT | Epstein et al. ( | Yes/yes/yes | P + T | Benzydamine vs. placebo | Significant reduction of incidence and severity |
| RT | Samaranayake et al. ( | Yes/no/no | P | Benzydamine vs. chlorhexidine | No difference (more discomfort) |
| CT + RT | Prada et al. ( | Yes/yes/yes | P + T | Benzydamine vs. placebo | Significant reduction |
| RT | Huang et al. ( | Yes/yes/yes | P | Parenteral glutamine vs. placebo | No difference |
| CT + RT | Porteder et al. ( | No/yes/no | P | PGE2 or nothing | Significant reduction (less pain) |
| RT | Matejka et al. ( | No/yes/no | T | PGE2 tablets four times a day | Reduction of mucositis severity |
| CT + RT | Hasenau et al. ( | No/no/no | P + T | P + T hydrogen peroxide, nystatin | Lower incidence of mucositis |
| RT | Rothwell et al. ( | Yes/yes/yes | P | Hydrocortisone, nystatin, tetracyclines, diphenhydramine vs. placebo | Significant reduction of incidence |
| RT | Maciejewski et al. ( | No/yes/no | P | Applied to one side of buccal mucosa | Significant reduction compared with contralateral side |
| RT | Barker et al. ( | Yes/yes/yes | Oral hygiene + sucralfate vs. diphenhydramine + kaolin-pectin | No difference | |
| CT + RT | Berger et al. ( | No/yes/no | T | Capsaicin in a candy vehicle | Significant temporary pain relief |
| CT + RT | Mills ( | Yes/yes/no | P | Beta-carotene or nothing | Decreased severity in the treatment group |
| RT | Bourhis et al. ( | Yes/yes/no | P | Amifostine or nothing | Marked reduction of mucositis (tolerance was poor) |
| RT | Koukourakis et al. ( | Yes/yes/yes | P | Amifostine vs. saline | Significant reduction of mucositis |
| RT | Schonekas et al. ( | No/yes/no | P | Amifostine vs. controls | Significant reduction of mucositis |
| RT | Wagner et al. ( | Yes/yes/no | P | Amifostine or nothing | Significant reduction of mucositis |
| CT + RT | Buntzel et al. ( | Yes/yes/no | P | Amifostine or nothing | Significant reduction of mucositis and xerostomia |
| CT + RT | Peters et al. ( | Yes/yes/no | P | Amifostine or nothing | No significant difference |
| CT + RT | Vacha et al. ( | Yes/yes/no | P | Amifostine or nothing | Trend toward reduction of mucositis |
| CT + RT | Osaki et al. ( | Yes/yes/no | P | Vitamins C + E, glutathione ± azelastine | Significant reduction |
| RT | Pillsbury et al. ( | Yes/yes/yes | P | Indomethacin vs. placebo | Significant delay of mucositis onset |
| CT + RT | Mose et al. ( | No/yes/no | P | i.m. immunoglobulins | Significant reduction in CT + RT patients, no difference in RT |
| RT | Wagner et al. ( | Yes/yes/no | P | RT + GM-CSF vs. historical control | Significant lower severity of mucositis |
| RT | Makkonen et al. ( | No/yes/no | P | Sucralfate ± GM-CSF | No difference |
| RT | Kannan et al. ( | No/yes/no | P | RT + GM-CSF | Lower incidence of severe mucositis |
| CT + RT | Rosso et al. ( | No/yes/no | P | GM-CSF vs. historical control sig. lower incidence of severe mucositis | Lower incidence of severe mucositis |
| RT | Mascarin et al. ( | Yes/yes/no | P | RT ± G-CSF | Less treatment interruptions only |
| RT | Schneider et al. ( | Yes/yes/yes | P | RT ± G-CSF | Significant reduced incidence of severe mucositis |
| CT + RT | Bubley et al. ( | Yes/yes/yes | P | Acyclovir vs. placebo | No impact upon incidence and severity of mucositis |
RT, radiotherapy; P/T, prevention or treatment; CT, chemotherapy; HD-CT, high-dose chemotherapy; BMT, bone marrow transplantation; TBI, total body irradiation; i.m., intramuscular; G-CSF, colony-stimulating factor; GM-CSF, granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor.
.
Clinical trials for RIOM as listed on .
| NCT number | Title | Conditions | Last updated | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT02508389 | A Study of GC4419 Protection against Radiation Induced Oral Mucositis in Patients with Head & Neck Cancer | Radiation-Induced Oral Mucositis | 23 November 2015 | ||
| NCT00698204 | Cox-2 Inhibition in Radiation-Induced Oral Mucositis | Oral Mucositis | 7 May 2014 | ||
| NCT00814359 | Magic Mouthwash Plus Sucralfate Versus Benzydamine Hydrochloride for the Treatment of Radiation-Induced Mucositis | Head and Neck Cancer|Mucositis | 19 January 2011 | ||
| NCT01400620 | Safety and Efficacy of IZN-6N4 Oral Rinse for the Prevention of Oral Mucositis in Patients with Head and Neck Cancer | Oral Mucositis | 9 November 2015 | ||
| NCT00051441 | Safety & Efficacy Study of Benzydamine Oral Rinse for the Treatment of Oral Mucositis (Mouth Sores) Resulting From Radiation Therapy for Cancer of the Oral Cavity, Oropharynx, or Nasopharynx | Stomatitis|Radiation Effects | 17 May 2011 | ||
| NCT02608879 | Oral Care Protocol for the Management of Chemotherapy and Radiation Therapy-Induced Oral Mucositis | Oral Mucositis|Oral Cancer | 17 November 2015 | ||
| NCT01465308 | The Effect of Honey on Xerostomia and Oral Mucositis | Head and Neck Cancer | 7 October 2014 | ||
| NCT01375088 | Assessing the Preventing and Therapeutic Effect of Propolis in Radiotherapy Induced Mucositis of Head and Neck Cancers | Radiation-induced Mucositis of Oral Mucous Membranes | 21 November 2012 | ||
| NCT01066741 | Prevention of Radiation-induced Severe Oral Mucositis in Oral Cavity, Oropharynx, Hypopharynx, and Cavum Cancer | Oropharynx Cancer|Hypopharynx Cancer | 31 October 2012 | ||
| NCT00006994 | S9908: Glutamine in Treating Mucositis Caused by Radiation Therapy in Patients with Newly Diagnosed Cancer of the Mouth or Throat | Cancer-related Problem/Condition|Head and Neck Cancer|Pain | 17 November 2015 | ||
| NCT02430298 | Topical/Oral Melatonin for Preventing Concurrent Radiochemotherapy Induced Oral Mucositis/Xerostomia Cancer Patients | Head and Neck Cancer | 12 May 2015 | ||
| NCT02397486 | The Impact of Pentoxifylline and Vitamin E on Radiotherapy-induced Toxicity in Head & Neck Cancer Patients | Head and Neck Neoplasms | 27 May 2015 | ||
| NCT01941992 | Role of SAMITAL® in the Relief of Chemoradiation (CT-RT) Induced Oral Mucositis in Head and Neck Cancer Patients | Head-and-neck Squamous Cell Carcinoma|Oral Mucositis | 24 March 2015 | ||
| NCT01318889 | Dexpanthenol Mouthwash to Treat Oral Mucositis | Oral Mucositis (Ulcerative) Due to Radiation | 5 July 2011 | ||
| NCT02016807 | ZeroTolerance Mucositis: Managing Oral and Alimentary Mucositis with High Potency Sucralfate—ProThelial | Oral Mucositis|Nausea|Vomiting|Diarrhea | 16 December 2013 | ||
| NCT00293462 | GM-CSF Mouthwash for Preventing and Treating Mucositis in Patients Who Are Undergoing Radiation Therapy for Head and Neck Cancer | Head and Neck Cancer|Mucositis|Radiation Toxicity | 14 May 2013 | ||
| NCT00728585 | Palifermin in Preventing Oral Mucositis Caused by Chemotherapy and/or Radiation Therapy in Young Patients Undergoing Stem Cell Transplant | Breast Cancer|Graft vs. Host Disease|Kidney Cancer|Leukemia|Lymphoma|Mucositis|Multiple Myeloma|Plasma Cell Neoplasm|Myelodysplastic Syndromes|Neuroblastoma|Ovarian Cancer|Sarcoma|Testicular Germ Cell Tumor | 30 May 2013 | ||
| NCT02604329 | Feasibility Study of a Protocol to Treat Pediatric Oral Mucositis by Low-Level Laser Therapy | Oral Mucositis | 12 November 2015 | ||
| NCT02075749 | Comparing Triamcinolone Acetonide Mucoadhesive Films with Licorice Mucoadhesive Films | Mucositis | 9 July 2014 | ||
| NCT01385748 | Efficacy and Safety Study of Clonidine Lauriad® to Treat Oral Mucositis | Oral Mucositis | 7 July 2015 | ||
| NCT01707641 | Effect of Lactobacillus Brevis CD2 in Prevention of Radio-chemotherapy Induced Oral Mucositis in Head and Neck Cancer | Mucositis | 19 May 2014 | ||
| NCT00613743 | Effect of Topical Morphine (Mouthwash) on Oral Pain Due to Chemo- and/or Radiotherapy Induced Mucositis | Cancer|Mucositis | 12 January 2010 | ||
| NCT00431925 | Can Cytokines Predict the Severity of Acute Mucositis and the Need for Gastrostomy Tubes (PEG)? | Oral Mucositis|Xerostomia|Weight Loss|Head and Neck Cancer | 9 August 2007 | ||
| NCT01806272 | Recombinant Human Granulocyte Macrophage Colony-Stimulating Factor (rhGM-CSF) Treating Oral Mucositis | Nasopharyngeal Cancers | 27 March 2013 | ||
| NCT01876407 | Effectiveness of Low Energy Laser Treatment in Oral Mucositis Induced by Chemotherapy and Radiotherapy in Head and Neck Cancer | Oral Mucositis | 30 April 15 | ||
| NCT00584597 | A Trial of Homeopathic Medication TRAUMEEL S for the Treatment of Radiation-Induced Mucositis | Mucositis|Head and Neck Cancer | 10 December 2010 | ||
| NCT00615420 | A Randomized Placebo-Controlled Trial of Manuka Honey for Oral Mucositis Due to Radiation Therapy for Cancer | Radiotherapy-Induced Mucositis|Head and Neck Cancer | 22 May 2012 | ||
| NCT01898091 | Herbal Mouthrinse for Oral Mucositis Study | Oral Mucositis | 2 1 Septmebr 2015 | ||
| NCT01772706 | Laser Mucite ORL: Effectiveness of Laser Therapy for Mucositis Induced by a Radio-chemotherapy in Head and Neck Cancer | Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma|Squamous Cell Carcinoma of Oropharynx|Squamous Cell Carcinoma of Hypopharynx|Oral Mucositis | 17 January 2013 | ||
| NCT01837446 | Morphine Mouthwash for Management of Oral Mucositis in Patients with Head and Neck Cancer | Stomatitis | 22 April 2013 | ||
| NCT02309437 | Early Use of Opioid to Control Local Mucosa Pain Induced by Irradiation in Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma Patients | Nutrition Disorders|Quality of Life | 3 December 2014 | ||
| NCT01668849 | Edible Plant Exosome Ability to Prevent Oral Mucositis Associated with Chemoradiation Treatment of Head and Neck Cancer | Head and Neck Cancer|Oral Mucositis | 12 May 2015 | ||
| NCT01975688 | A Pharmacokinetic Study of Single Doses of Sativex in Treatment-Induced Mucositis | Head and Neck Squamous Cell Carcinoma | 12 May 2015 | ||
| NCT01252498 | Evaluation of the Role of Prostaglandins in Radiation-induced Mucositis | Cancer of the Head and Neck|Radiotherapy | 3 February 2014 | ||
| NCT01840436 | Efficacy of MUCIPLIQ on the Incidence of Radio-chemotherapy-Induced Mucositis in Patients Suffering From Oral Cancer | Oral Mucositis|Carcinoma | 15 May 2014 | ||
| NCT00699569 | Hyperimmune Colostrum and Oral Mucositis | Head and Neck Cancer | 22 July 2008 | ||
| NCT02555501 | Oral Mucositis and Laser Therapy Associated with Photodynamic Therapy | Oral Mucositis | 18 September 2015 | ||
| NCT02050503 | Intranasal Transmucosal Fentanyl Pectin for Breakthrough Cancer Pain in Radiation-Induced Oropharyngeal Mucositis | Breakthrough Pain|Mucositis|Radiotherapy|Chemotherapy|Head and Neck Cancer | 16 March 2015 | ||
| NCT01883908 | Acupuncture in Reducing the Severity of Chemoradiation-Induced Mucositis in Patients with Oropharyngeal Cancer | Mucositis|Oropharyngeal Cancer | 3 September 2015 | ||
| NCT01432873 | Oral Selenium Therapy for the Prevention of Mucositis | Mucositis|Hematopoietic Stem Cell transplantation | 31 May 2012 | ||