Background: Xerostomia is a serious morbidity of radiation treatment in head and neck cancer.

Methods: We conducted a prospective phase III multicenter randomized study comparing submandibular salivary gland transfer (SGT) procedure with pilocarpine during and for 3 months after XRT. Salivary flow (baseline, stimulated) and University of Washington Quality of Life Questionnaire (U of W QOL) scores were measured. RESULTS.: An interim intent to treat analysis (120 patients) at 6 months shows superior results in SGT arm: median baseline salivary flow for SGT (0.04 mL/minute) versus pilocarpine (0.01 mL/minute), p = .001; median stimulated salivary flow (0.18 mL/minute) for SGT versus (0.05 mL/minute) for pilocarpine, p = .003. Scores (U of W QOL) for amount (p = .017) and consistency of saliva (p = .005) in favor of SGT leading to premature closure of study.

Conclusions: Submandibular SGT procedure is superior to pilocarpine in management of radiation-induced xerostomia.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/hed.20961DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

salivary flow
12
phase iii
8
randomized study
8
submandibular salivary
8
salivary gland
8
gland transfer
8
management radiation-induced
8
radiation-induced xerostomia
8
sgt procedure
8
sgt
6

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!