| Literature DB >> 30411162 |
Tanaya S Deshpande1, Pierre Blanchard1,2, Li Wang3, Robert L Foote4, Xiaodong Zhang5, Steven J Frank6.
Abstract
OPINION STATEMENT: Taste sensation is vital for a healthy body as it influences our food intake, acts as a defense mechanism and elicits pleasure. Majority of the head and neck cancer (HNC) patients undergoing radiotherapy suffer from altered taste function and often complain of inability to taste their food, reduced food intake, and weakness. However, there are not many studies conducted to assess this commonly reported side effect. Furthermore, clinical research on radiotherapy-induced taste alterations has proven to be difficult, considering a lack of reliable and validated study tools for assessing objective and subjective outcomes. Developing standardized tools for assessment of taste function and conducting prospective studies in larger population of HNC is the need of the hour. Taste sensation being critically important for sustenance, we need to focus on ways to preserve it. The physical properties of proton particle enable localization of the radiation dose precisely to the tumor and minimizing the exposure of the adjacent healthy tissues. By using Intensity-Modulated Proton Therapy in HNC patients, we anticipate preserving the taste sensation by reducing the dose of radiation to the taste buds.Entities:
Keywords: Head and neck cancer; Irradiation; Radiotherapy; Taste alteration; Taste dysfunction
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30411162 PMCID: PMC6244914 DOI: 10.1007/s11864-018-0580-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Treat Options Oncol ISSN: 1534-6277
Fig. 1PRISMA 2009 flow diagram for “Radiation-Related Alterations of Taste Function in Patients With Head and Neck Cancer: a Systematic Review.” Based on [7].
Cohort studies on taste alteration among head and neck cancer patients
| Reference |
| Study design | Location/type of primary tumor | Type of RT | Taste assessment | Time points for data collection | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fernando et al. [ | PC | OC, OP, HP, L, ethmoids, ear, and Max. antrum | Not specified | Taste solutions; STA | OTL and STL at baseline and EOT; STL at 1-mo post-RT | OTL ( | |
| Shi et al. [ | PC | OC, OP, NP, HP, L, and nasal vestibule | 2D-RT with CT | Whole mouth technique; STA | Pre-RT; irradiation doses at 15, 30, 45, and 60 Gy | Sweet, sour, salty, and bitter tastes showed no statistical difference between the threshold at pre-RT and that at 15, 30, 45, and 60 Gy. Significantly impaired threshold of umami taste was revealed at 30 Gy ( | |
| Yamashita et al. [ | PC | OP, NP, HP, and others | 2D-RT w/wo CT | FPD | Baseline and weekly from 1 wk to 10–12 wks after start of RT | All tastes declined on the fifth wk after the start of RT and improved on the 11th wk. The effect w/wo CT did not differ. | |
| Sandow et al. [ | N1 = 13; N0 = 5 | PC | OP | 2D-RT w/wo CT | Whole mouth technique | Before RT and at 1-, 6-, and 12-mo post-RT | There were significant elevations in thresholds for sweet, salty, bitter, and sour during radiation therapy at the 1-mo threshold test that were restored to baseline levels at 6 mo and 1 year after RT. |
| Yamashita et al. [ | PC | OC, OP, NP, HP, L, CN, maxilla, NC, lymphomas, and others | Not specified | FPD | Baseline; weekly from 1st wk up to 10–16 wks; monthly from 4 mo to 14–24 mo after start of RT | In pts w/ anterior tongue irradiated, significant impairment of the threshold of all four basic tastes at 3 wks after starting RT that persisted until 8th wk ( | |
| Mirza et al. [ | N1 = 8; N0 = 17 | PC | OP, NP, L, and SG | 2D-RT | Pipette droplet; video microscopy | Baseline and 2 wks, 2-mo, and 6-mo post-RT | Sour taste was significantly affected in pts at 2-mo post-RT. At 6-mo post-RT, pts had lower taste test scores for bitter, salty, sour tastes w/ bitter, and sour, most impaired. Taste pores decreased in the RT group. |
| Kamprad et al. [ | N1 = 44; N0 = 30 | PC | Head and neck tumor | Not specified | Taste solutions for 4 basic tastes | Before RT, during RT, and 8 wks, 1-, 2-, 3-, and 6-mo post-RT | Gustatory disturbance was more severe in pts w/ entire tongue irradiated. The gustatory disturbances regressed within 8wks after RT in pts with partial-tongue irradiation and almost completely after 6mo in pts w/ entire-tongue irradiation |
| Yamashita et al. [ | PC | OP, NP, HP, and other | 2D-RT w/wo CT | Whole mouth technique | Baseline; weekly from 1-wk to 10–12-wk post-RT | Umami taste declined in the 3rd wk after the start of RT and improved of the 8th wk. | |
| Baharvand et al. [ | PC | OC, OP, NP, HP, SG, maxilla, and mandible | 2D-RT w/wo CT | Whole mouth technique; STA | At baseline and 3-week post-RT | All pts had dysgeusia after RT ( | |
| Pavlidis et al. [ | PC | OP, HP, L, and SG | 2D-RT w/wo CT or CT only | EGM and contact endoscopy | Baseline, 3 wks after beginning of t/t and post-RT. | Elevated EGM thresholds at 3 wks seen in all pts. Complete ageusia ( | |
| Riva et al. [ | N1 = 30; N0 = 30 | RC | NP | 2D-RT/3D-RT/IMRT w/wo CT | Taste strips test (filter paper strips) | 4- to 13-year post-RT | A higher percentage of hypogeusia was found in irradiated pts than the controls. Sweet, bitter, salty, and taste total score was significantly lower for IMRT, compared w/ 2D-RT/3D-CRT group. |
| Sapir et al. [ | PC | OP | IMRT w/ CT | QOL including STA | At baseline, 1-, 3-, 6-, and 12-mo post-RT | Severe dysgeusia was reported by 50%, 40%, 22%, and 23% of pts at 1, 3, 6, and 12 mo after t/t respectively. Significant associations were found between patient-reported severe dysgeusia and radiation dose to OC ( |
CT, chemotherapy; CS, cross-sectional; CN, cervical nodes; c/o, complaining of; EGM, electrogustometry; FPD, filter paper disc method; FP, fungiform papillae; HL, Hodgkin’s lymphoma; HP, hypopharynx; L, larynx; mo, months; LSM; laser-scanning microscopy; N1, cases/patients; N0, controls; NC, nasal cavity; NP, nasopharynx; NA, not applicable; OC, oral cavity; OP, oropharynx; P, pharynx; PC, prospective cohort; pts, patient; RC, retrospective cohort; RT, radiotherapy; SG, salivary glands; STA, subjective taste assessment; t/t, treatment; wk, week; w/w0, with or without
Cross-sectional studies on taste alteration among head and neck cancer patients
| Reference |
| Study design | Location/type of primary tumor | Type of RT | Taste assessment | Time points for data collection | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mossman et al. [ | CS | OC, OP, NP, HP, L, and SG | 2D-RT | Forced-choice, three stimulus drop technique; STA | 1- to 7-year post-RT | 69% of the pts had measurable taste loss; salt and bitter affected most, and sweet and sour affected least. Taste intensity responsiveness most severely affected for salt and bitter. | |
| Schwartz et al. [ | CS | OC, OP, NP, SG, CN, and neck | 2D-RT | Whole mouth technique; STA | 1- to 19-year post-RT | Near normal suprathreshold taste intensity perception in pts who have received head and neck RT. Type and taste intensity disturbance may be related to the age of the pt. | |
| Maes et al. [ | CS | OC, OP, NP, HP, and SG | 2D-RT | Whole mouth technique; STA | Baseline, 2, 6, and 12–24 mo after RT | Loss of taste was most pronounced after 2 mo after RT. Bitter and salt qualities were most impaired. Gradual recovery seen during the first year after RT. Partial taste loss persisted 1–2 years. after RT. | |
| Just et al. [ | CS | OP, HP, L, and SG | RCT | LSM; filter paper strips and EGM. | During or after RCT | Pts c/o taste disorders during RCT exhibited a significant decrease of taste function assessed with both natural and electric stimuli. Thicker epithelia and smaller areas of the taste pores in pts compared with healthy subjects. In 30% pts, no taste pores detectable. | |
| McLaughlin et al. 2013 | CS | OC, P, L, paranasal cavity, and others | Surgery and/or RT, RT w/ CT w/wo surgery | Whole mouth technique | 3 months to more than 28 years after completion of t/t | 85 of 92 participants had some measurable taste dysfunction. Confusion between bitter and sour and the inability to discriminate among the different concentrations of the sweet solutions seen. Statistically significant weight loss was associated with dysgeusia. | |
| Mossman et al. [ | NA | OC, OP, NP, HP, L, HL, and SG | 2D-RT | Forced-choice, three stimulus drop technique; STA | Baseline, during RT, 1 mo post-RT and 1 year post-RT | The bitter and salt qualities showed earliest and greatest impairment and the sweet quality the least. Scaling impairment was most severe for bitter and salt tastes. Scaling impairment occurred before changes in either detection or recognition thresholds. |
CT, chemotherapy; CS, cross-sectional; CN, cervical nodes; c/o, complaining of; EGM, electrogustometry; FPD, filter paper disc method; FP, fungiform papillae; HL, Hodgkin’s lymphoma; HP, hypopharynx; L, larynx; mo, months; LSM, laser-scanning microscopy; N1, cases/patients; N0, controls; NC, nasal cavity; NP, nasopharynx; NA, not applicable; OC, oral cavity; OP, oropharynx; P, pharynx, PC, prospective cohort; pts, patient; RC, retrospective cohort; RT, radiotherapy; SG, salivary glands; STA, subjective taste assessment; t/t, treatment; wk, week; w/w0, with or without
Newcastle-Ottawa Scale (NOS) for cohort studies
S1, representativeness of the exposed cohort (exposed to HN radiation) to the general population; S2, selection of the non-exposed cohort (HN region not exposed to radiation) from the same population; S3, ascertainment of radiation exposure; S4, taste alteration not present at start of study; C, comparability of cohorts; O1, assessment of outcome; O2, length of follow-up adequate for taste alteration to occur; O3, adequacy of follow-up
Modified Newcastle-Ottawa Scale (NOS) for cross-sectional studies
S1, representativeness of the sample to the general population; S2, selection of the non-exposed sample (HN region not exposed to radiation) from the same population; S3, ascertainment of radiation exposure; C, comparability of exposed and unexposed; O1, assessment of taste alteration