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UnknownNCT05242991

Effectiveness of Photobiomodulation Protocols in Radiation-induced Oral Side Effects in H&N Cancer Patients

Comparison of Two Photobiomodulation Protocols for the Oral Mucositis and Xerostomia Prevention in Irradiated Head and Neck Cancer Patients: a Randomized, Multicenter, Single-blind Controlled Clinical Trial

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
132 (estimated)
Sponsor
Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 90 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Head and neck cancer (HNC) are among the most frequent malignancies in the world. The main treatment modalities for HNC are surgical excision, radiotherapy (RT), and chemotherapy (CT). Severe oral sequelae such as oral mucositis (OM), dysgeusia, opportunistic infections, trismus, and xerostomia/hyposalivation can affect HNC patients due to oncological treatment with RT and QT. Photobiomodulation therapy (PBMT) with an intraoral low-power laser has been studied as an excellent tool in the management of OM and xerostomia and thus improves the tolerability of RT in the head and neck region. The aim of this multicenter, randomized, single-blind clinical trial is to compare the effects of two photobiomodulation protocols (intraoral application low-level laser and defocused extraoral application of high-power laser) in the management of oral mucositis (OM) and xerostomia in head and neck cancer patients undergoing radiotherapy (RT). It is expected defocused extraoral high-power photobiomodulation shows results as good as intraoral photobiomodulation on the management of oral mucositis.

Detailed description

Radiotherapy (RT) and chemotherapy-induced oral side effects, as oral mucositis, and xerostomia are extremely challenging for professionals in the supportive care for head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) patients. There is a substantial evidence about the benefits of photobiomodulation in the management of these oral side effects, mainly in the decrease of oral mucositis (OM) rates and OM severity, healing of OM ulcers and pain relief by intraoral low-level lasers. However, new parameters as extraoral applications by defocused high-power lasers have been investigated to improve the OM outcomes, the patients' complaints, and the experience in the clinical assistance by professionals. Thus, 132 H\&N cancer patients will be, globally and simultaneously, randomized according to clinical stage of head and neck cancer, type of treatment (isolated RT or RT and QT), type of RT (RTC3D or IMRT) and center involved (A.C. Camargo Cancer Center or State of São Paulo Cancer Institute or Porto Alegre Clinics Hospital). The randomized patients can be allocated into two groups: Group I: intraoral photobiomodulation with low level laser therapy (660nm, 100 mW, 10 J/cm2, 3 s/point) and Group II: extraoral photobiomodulation with high level laser therapy (810 + 980 nm, 1000 mW, 6.11 J/cm2, 30 s/point). PBMT will be performed daily, 5 times per week during the radiotherapy or until wound healing of OM lesions by a trained professional. Oral mucositis, pain, xerostomia, dysphagia, dysgeusia, oral functions, labial hydration and radiodermatitis will be evaluated daily. Salivary flow and trismus will be assessed weekly, and two questionaries (OHIP-14 and Vanderbilt) will be assessed on the first day of RT, on the middle of RT regimen, on the final of RT regimen and three months later RT sessions.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEPhotobiomodulation therapyLight therapy for the management of oral side effects related to radiotherapy, mainly in the decrease of oral mucositis (OM) rates and OM severity, healing of OM ulcers and pain relief.

Timeline

Start date
2021-03-01
Primary completion
2023-03-01
Completion
2024-10-01
First posted
2022-02-16
Last updated
2023-03-09

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Brazil

Regulatory

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05242991. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.