Prospective assessment of taste impairment and nausea during radiotherapy for head and neck cancer

被引:0
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作者
Stefania Martini
Giuseppe Carlo Iorio
Francesca Arcadipane
Francesco Olivero
Patrick Silvetti
Monica Rampino
Paolo Garzino Demo
Massimo Fasolis
Giancarlo Pecorari
Mario Airoldi
Umberto Ricardi
Pierfrancesco Franco
机构
[1] University of Turin School of Medicine,Department of Oncology, Radiation Oncology
[2] AOU Citta’ Della Salute e Della Scienza,Department of Oncology, Radiation Oncology
[3] University of Turin,Maxillofacial Surgery Division, Department of Surgical Sciences
[4] University of Turin,1st ENT Division, Department of Surgical Sciences
[5] AOU Città Della Salute e Della Scienza,2nd Medical Oncology Division, Department of Oncology
来源
Medical Oncology | 2019年 / 36卷
关键词
Nausea; Dysgeusia; Taste impairment; Head and neck cancer; Radiotherapy; Chemotherapy; Ginger;
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学科分类号
摘要
Dysgeusia and nausea are common side effects observed in head and neck cancer patients treated with either exclusive radiotherapy or combined modality treatment. The aim of the present study was to prospectively evaluate dysgeusia, during treatment and follow-up, using the chemotherapy-induced taste alteration scale (CiTAS), a metrics based on 18-items exploring three dimensions (quantitative and qualitative changes in taste perception, and diet-related issues) identified through a four-factor analysis: decline in basic taste, discomfort, phantogeusia–parageusia, and general taste alterations. Moreover, we scored, according to Common Toxicity Criteria Adverse Events, nausea and other treatment-related toxicities. Since, ginger is traditionally used to prevent and/or treat nausea and vomiting, we prophylactically employed a ginger-based supplement named Naumix/Naugin (Gamfarma, Milan, Italy), to potentially mitigate both nausea and taste impairment. Using the CiTAS scale, we highlighted a progressive increase in all dysgeusia dimensions, peaking at the VII week of treatment and a subsequent partial late recovery. In particular, we observed a recovery for discomfort, phantogeusia–parageusia, and general taste alterations at 6 months. Grade 2 nausea, observed to be as low as 12.9% potentially due to the use of ginger, peaked at the III week of treatment. Finally, for patients experiencing nausea, the dysgeusia dimension of discomfort was also relevant.
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