Dysphagia and Oral Morbidities in Chemoradiation-Treated Head and Neck Cancer Patients.

Dysphagia

Swallowing Research Laboratory, Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, University of Central Florida, 3280 Progress Drive, Suite 500, Orlando, FL, 32826, USA.

Published: December 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examined how oral health issues affect swallowing ability in head/neck cancer patients undergoing chemoradiation therapy (CRT) and at 3 months post-treatment.
  • Thirty patients were assessed at three points: baseline, 6 weeks (end of CRT), and 3 months after CRT, using various measures of swallowing ability and oral morbidities like dry mouth and pain.
  • Results indicated significant declines in swallowing function at 6 weeks, with some recovery by 3 months; however, relationships between swallowing ability and oral issues showed different patterns at these time points, indicating varying underlying mechanisms affecting dysphagia during recovery.

Article Abstract

This study prospectively evaluated relationships between oral morbidities and swallowing ability in head/neck cancer patients following chemoradiation therapy (CRT) and at 3 months following CRT. Thirty patients with confirmed head/neck cancer undergoing chemoradiation were assessed with a battery of swallowing measures and measures of oral morbidities related to chemoradiation (xerostomia, mucositis, pain, taste/smell, oral moisture). All measures were completed at baseline (within the first week of CRT), at 6 weeks (end of treatment), and at 3 months following chemoradiation. Descriptive and univariate statistics were used to depict change over time in swallowing and each oral morbidity. Correlation analyses evaluated relationships between swallowing function and oral morbidities at each time point. Most measures demonstrated significant negative change at 6 weeks with incomplete recovery at 3 months. At 6 weeks, mucositis ratings, xerostomia, and retronasal smell intensity demonstrated significant inverse relationships with swallowing function. In addition, oral moisture levels demonstrated significant positive relationships with swallowing function. At 3 months, mucositis ratings maintained a significant, inverse relationship with swallow function. Taste and both orthonasal and retronasal smell intensity ratings demonstrated inverse relationships with measures of swallow function. Swallow functions and oral morbidities deteriorate significantly following CRT with incomplete recovery at 3 months post treatment. Furthermore, different patterns of relationships between swallow function measures and oral morbidities were obtained at the 6-week versus the 3-month assessment point suggesting that different mechanisms may contribute to the development versus the maintenance of dysphagia over the trajectory of treatment in these patients.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00455-018-9895-6DOI Listing

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