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Systematic review of basic oral care for the management of oral mucositis in cancer patients and clinical practice guidelines

Authors :
Hong, C.H.L. Gueiros, L.A. Fulton, J.S. Cheng, K.K.F. Kandwal, A. Galiti, D. Fall-Dickson, J.M. Johansen, J. Ameringer, S. Kataoka, T. Weikel, D. Eilers, J. Ranna, V. Vaddi, A. Lalla, R.V. Bossi, P. Elad, S. On behalf of the Mucositis Study Group of the Multinational Association of Supportive Care in Cancer/International Society for Oral Oncology (MASCC/ISOO)
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Purpose: The aim of this study was to update the clinical practice guidelines for the use of basic oral care (BOC) interventions for the prevention and/or treatment of oral mucositis (OM). Methods: A systematic review was conducted by the Mucositis Study Group of the Multinational Association of Supportive Care in Cancer/International Society for Oral Oncology (MASCC/ISOO). The body of evidence for each intervention in each cancer treatment setting was assigned an evidence level. The findings were added to the database used to develop the 2013 MASCC/ISOO clinical practice guidelines. Based on the evidence level, one of the following three guideline determinations was possible: Recommendation, Suggestion, No guideline possible. Results: A total of 17 new papers across six interventions were examined and merged with a previous database. Based on the literature, the following guidelines were possible. The panel suggests that the implementation of multi-agent combination oral care protocols is beneficial for the prevention of OM during chemotherapy, head and neck (H&N) radiation therapy (RT), and hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (Level of Evidence III). The panel suggests that chlorhexidine not be used to prevent OM in patients undergoing H&N RT (Level of Evidence III). No guideline was possible for professional oral care, patient education, saline, and sodium bicarbonate, and expert opinion complemented these guidelines. Conclusions: The evidence supports the use of multi-agent combination oral care protocols in the specific populations listed above. Additional well-designed research is needed on the other BOC interventions prior to guideline formulation. © 2019, Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.od......2127..fae51fd3819b4ef0a735d5bdb1d63123