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[Anti-emetic effect of granisetron in patients undergoing cranial and craniospinal radiotherapy]. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • About 30-59% of patients receiving cranial or craniospinal radiotherapy experience nausea and vomiting; this study tested the anti-emetic granisetron for effectiveness in these patients.
  • A retrospective study was conducted on 34 patients (ages 3-80) who received cranial or craniospinal radiation, assessing the impact of granisetron on nausea and vomiting during treatment.
  • Results showed that granisetron provided a complete response in 5 out of 9 patients with substantial efficacy, while some patients experienced mild side effects like constipation, but no major adverse effects were noted.

Article Abstract

Purpose: Approximately 30-59% of patients undergoing cranial or craniospinal radiotherapy experience nausea and/or vomiting. Here, we evaluated the effectiveness of granisetron for controlling emesis in patients treated with cranial or craniospinal radiotherapy.

Patients And Methods: Between December 2011 and January 2013, 34 patients(19 males, 15 females;age range, 3-80 years)received cranial or craniospinal radiotherapy at our department. All but one male patient, who developed meningitis during the irradiation period were enrolled in this retrospective study. Patients who experienced irradiation-induced vomiting(grade 1)or nausea(grade 2)were treated with granisetron as a rescue anti-emetic. Episodes were graded as(1)no vomiting, no nausea, no anti-emetic;(2)no vomiting, nausea, no anti-emetic;(3)no vomiting, nausea with anti-emetic;and(4)vomiting.

Results: Of the 9 patients who underwent whole-brain or whole neural-axis irradiation, 5(55.6%)experienced grade 2 nausea or vomiting. Two of 6 patients(33.3%)treated with whole ventricle irradiation experienced grade 2 nausea or vomiting. Three of 18 patients(16.7%)who underwent local-field irradiation experienced grade 2 nausea or vomiting. Patients who underwent wide-field irradiation experienced nausea, vomiting, and anorexia(p<0.05). Complete response(no vomiting, no additional rescue anti-emetic, and no nausea)was observed in 5 of 9 patients treated with granisetron. Four of 9 patients(44.4%)treated with granisetron experienced constipation(grade 1 or 2);its administration had no major adverse effects in our study population.

Conclusion: Rescue therapy with granisetron is safe and effective to treat nausea and vomiting in patients subjected to cranial or craniospinal irradiation.

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