| Literature DB >> 31226812 |
Debora Basile1,2, Paola Di Nardo3, Carla Corvaja4,5, Silvio Ken Garattini6,7, Giacomo Pelizzari8,9, Camilla Lisanti10,11, Lucia Bortot12,13, Lucia Da Ros14, Michele Bartoletti15,16, Matteo Borghi17, Lorenzo Gerratana18,19, Davide Lombardi20, Fabio Puglisi21,22.
Abstract
Mucositis is one of the most common debilitating side effects related to chemotherapy (CT), radiation therapy (RT), targeted agents and immunotherapy. It is a complex process potentially involving any portion of the gastrointestinal tract and injuring the mucosa, leading to inflammatory or ulcerative lesions. Mechanisms and clinical presentation can differ according both to the anatomic site involved (oral or gastrointestinal) and the treatment received. Understanding the pathophysiology and management of mucosal injury as a secondary effect of anti-cancer treatment is an important area of clinical research. Prophylaxis, early diagnosis, and adequate management of complications are essential to increase therapeutic success and, thus, improve the survival outcomes of cancer patients. This review focuses on the pathobiology and management guidelines for mucositis, a secondary effect of old and new anti-cancer treatments, highlighting recent advances in prevention and discussing future research options.Entities:
Keywords: anti-cancer treatments; mucosal impairment; mucosal injury; mucositis
Year: 2019 PMID: 31226812 PMCID: PMC6627284 DOI: 10.3390/cancers11060857
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1Mucositis pathobiology. This model has proven relevant for oral mucositis and gastrointestinal mucositis induced by chemotherapy and radiotherapy [7,13]. Conversely, there is still little information about the pathogenesis of mucositis associated with the newer anticancer treatment, but they likely differ from “classical mucositis”.
Prophylaxis strategies for oral and gastrointestinal mucositis.
| Intervention | Aim | Treatment Setting | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Prevention of OM | |||
| Basic oral care protocol | Prevention of OM | All cancer treatments | [ |
| Oral cryotherapy | Prevention of OM | Bolus 5-FU chemotherapy HD melphalan ± TB-RT for HSCT | [ |
| Benzydamine mouthwash | Prevention of OM | RT for HN cancer patients | [ |
| Photobiomodulation (PBM) | Prevention of OM | HDCT ± TB-RT for HSCT RT for HN cancer patients | [ |
| Palifermin | Prevention of OM | HDCT and TB-RT for HSCT | [ |
| Zinc supplements | Prevention of OM | RT or CT | [ |
| Prevention of mIAS | |||
| Dexamethasone-containing mouthwashes | Prevention of mIAS | BC patients treated with everolimus | [ |
| Prevention of GIM | |||
| Amifostine | Prevention of xerostomia | Post-operative RT for HN cancer patients | [ |
| Prevention of proctitis | RT for pelvic malignancy | [ | |
| Prevention of esophagitis | Concomitant CT-RT in NSCLC | [ | |
| Sulfasalazine | Prevention of enteropathy | Pelvis RT | [ |
| Probiotics | Prevention of diarrhea | CT and/or RT for pelvic malignancy | [ |
Legend: OM—oral mucositis; mIAS—mTOR inhibitor-associated stomatitis; GIM—gastrointestinal mucositis; FU—florouracil; HD—high-dose; TB—total body; RT—radio therapy; HSCT—hematopoietic stem cell transplantation; HN—head and neck; BC—breast cancer; HDCT—high-dose chemotherapy; NSCLC—non-small cell lung cancer; CT—chemotherapy.
Figure 2Dose modifications and management of mTOR inhibitors.
Figure 3Dose modifications and management of CDK4/6 inhibitors.
Figure 4Dose modifications and management of immunotherapy.