AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to create a model to understand how concurrent chemoradiation therapy (CCRT) for oropharyngeal cancer affects tongue function and structure, as current research methods are lacking.
  • Twenty-one male rata were divided into three groups to assess tongue strength and muscle changes after receiving CCRT or no treatment; results were collected at 2 weeks and 5 months.
  • Findings showed significant decreases in tongue strength and movement after CCRT, but no observable changes in muscle collagen content, indicating other factors might be responsible for the dysfunction observed.

Article Abstract

Objectives/hypothesis: To develop a clinically relevant model of oropharyngeal concurrent chemoradiation therapy (CCRT) in order to quantify the effects of CCRT on tongue function and structure. CCRT for advanced oropharyngeal cancer commonly leads to tongue base dysfunction and dysphagia. However, no preclinical models currently exist to study the pathophysiology of CCRT-related morbidity, thereby inhibiting the development of targeted therapeutics.

Study Design: Animal model.

Methods: Twenty-one male Sprague-Dawley rats were randomized into three groups: 2 week (2W), 5 month (5M), and control (C). The 2W and 5M animals received cisplatin, 5-fluorouracil, and five fractions of 7 Gy to the tongue base; the C animals received no intervention. In vivo tongue strength and displacement, as well as hyoglossus muscle collagen content, were assessed. Analyses were conducted 2 weeks or 5 months following completion of CCRT in the 2W and 5M groups, respectively.

Results: Peak tetanic and twitch tongue forces were significantly reduced in both 2W and 5M animals compared to controls (tetanic: P = .0041, P = .0089, respectively; twitch: P = .0201, P = .0020, respectively). Twitch half-decay time was prolonged in 2W animals compared to controls (P = .0247). Tongue displacement was significantly reduced across all testing parameters in 5M animals compared to both the C and 2W groups. No differences in collagen content were observed between experimental groups.

Conclusions: The current study is the first to describe a preclinical model of CCRT to the head and neck with an emphasis on clinical relevance. Tongue strength decreased at 2 weeks and 5 months post-CCRT. Tongue displacement increased only at 5 months post-CCRT. Fibrosis was not detected, implicating alternative causative factors for these findings.

Level Of Evidence: NA Laryngoscope, 1783-1790, 2018.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/lary.27033DOI Listing

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