Treatment-Related Dysgeusia in Oral and Oropharyngeal Cancer: A Comprehensive Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Treatment-Related Dysgeusia in Oral and Oropharyngeal Cancer Patients
2.1. Multimodality Therapy
2.2. Chemotherapy
2.3. Radiation Therapy
2.4. Surgical Treatment
3. Dysgeusia Detection Methods
4. Management of Dysgeusia
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Authors (Year) Country [Ref] | Study Design | Tumor Site | Pathological Stage | Total Cases | Treatment | Taste Assessment | Data Collection (m) * | Results |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pingulii et al., (2021) India [22] | Prospective | Oral cavity Oropharynx | All 48 I/II 49 III/IV | 97 | RS, RS + RT, SR + RT + CMT | QOL-H&N35 | 3–6 | Taste sensation impairment associated with patient malnutrition. |
Da Cunha et al., (2020) Brazil [13] | Cross sectional | Oral cavity Oropharynx | All 6 I/II 25 III/IV | 31 | RT + CMT | Chemical Gustometry | 0 | pT is significantly associated with hypogeusia. Bitter disorder is significantly higher compared other tastes. |
Vempati et al., (2020) USA [23] | Prospective | Oral cavity | All | 34 | CMT + RT + SRS | NCI CTCAE (v. 4.0) | 0–24 | High prevalence (90%) of acute (<90 days) and tardive (>90 days) dysgeusia after SRS. |
Epstein et al., (2020) USA [18] | Prospective | Oropharynx | All | 10 | IMRT +/- CMT | NCI CTCAE (v. 4.0) Likert Scale STTA | 0–24 | Sweet stimulates a pleasure taste perception. Spicy and bitter tastes stimulate the most dislike perception. Prevalence and severity of dysgeusia are significantly higher in smokers compared to non-smokers. |
Lu et al., (2020) China [24] | Cross-sectional | Tongue | II | 21 | RS + Flap | UW-QOL (v.4) | 12–24 | No patient complains dysgeusia, regardless the follow-up period. |
Palmieri et al., (2019) Brazil [11] | Prospective | Oral cavity | All 2 I/II 18 III/IV | 20 | RT + CMT | NCI CTCAE (v. 4.0) | Weekly during RT (1 to 6 w) | Severe dysgeusia is experienced from the 3° week of RT, with a peak during the 5° week of RT. |
Khan et al., (2019) Pakistan [10] | Case Control | Oral cavity | All | 68 | RT + CMT | Chemical gustometry | 0–7/8–11/12 w | Salty and sour postoperative recognition thresholds are significantly better in cases compared to controls. Sweet is the most altered taste. |
Abbas et al., (2019) Pakistan [21] | Cross sectional | Oral cavity | All | 59 | RS +/- RT +/- CMT | UW-QOL (v.4) | 0–12 | Advanced tumors have significantly worse taste score compared to early tumors. Advanced OTSCCs have significantly worse taste score compared to early cheek tumors. |
Moroney et al., (2018) Australia [25] | Prospective | Oropharynx | All 1 II 3 III 72 IV | 76 | IMRT + CMT | NCI CTCAE (v. 4.0) FOIS | Weekly during IMRT (1 to 7 w) 2–4–12 w post-IMRT | The prevalence and severity of dysgeusia increase during the therapy and 2–postoperative weeks, with a sharped increase from the 3° and 4° week of treatment. 12–weeks post therapy, the dysgeusia is experienced by 80% of patients. |
Yue et al., (2018) China [26] | Case control | Oral cavity | All | 139 | RS +/- Free Flap | UW-QOL (v.4) | 12 | No significant difference of taste score between cases and controls. Taste represented the worst domain. |
Galitis et al., (2017) Greece [19] | Prospective | Oral cavity | All | 10 | RS +/- RT/CMT | UW-QOL (v.4) QOL-H&N35 | Pre RT- End of RT- 3m post RT | Pre-RT dysgeusia: 40% End-RT dysgeusia: 88% 3 months follow-up dysgeusia: 50% 3-fold increased symptoms during RT. |
Naqvi et al., (2017) Pakistan [27] | Prospective | Oral cavity Oropharynx | All 22 I/II 12 III/IV | 34 | RS +/- RT/CMT | UW-QOL (v.4) | 0–6 | No significant difference of taste score between baseline and follow-up (6 months). |
Yan et al., (2017) China [28] | Prospective | Oral cavity | III/IV | 55 | RS +/- RT | UW-QOL (v.4) | 0–3–12 96 | Significant difference of taste score between survival and nonsurvival patients, 12–and 96–months post therapy. Survival patients showed a significant taste score difference between baseline and long-term (8 years) follow-up. |
Li W. et al., (2016) China [8] | Prospective | Tongue FOM | All | 41 | RS + Flap +/- CMRT | UW-QOL (v.4) OHIP 14 | 0–3 | No significant difference regarding the type of flap reconstruction. Taste is one of the worse domains. |
Yuan et al., (2016) China [29] | Prospective | Tongue | All | 67 | RS + Flap | UW-QOL (v.4) OHIP 14 QOL-H&N35 | 0–6–12 | Taste score significantly worsened 6–and 12–months post-therapy, compared to baseline. No significant difference regarding the type of flap. Taste score represents the worst domain. |
Hayashi et al., (2016) Japan [30] | Prospective | Oral cavity | All | 46 | PBT+ CMT | NCI-CTCAE (v. 4.0) | 0–12 | Dysgeusia: 64% Moderate dysgeusia: 57% Severe dysgeusia: 0% |
Singh et al., (2016) India [9] | Case Control | Oral cavity | III | 24 | RT | RTOG 0435 H&N (CTCAE) | 0–1–3 | No significant difference of severity of dysgeusia between cases and controls, regardless follow-up period. Cerrobend stent does not contributed to improvement of taste alteration |
Sapir et al., (2016) USA [7] | Prospective | Oropharynx | III/IV | 73 | IMRT | UW-QOL (v.4) QOL-H&N 35 XQ | 0–1–3–6–12 | Severity of dysgeusia is correlated to mean radiation dose. This dose tends to decrease during follow-up, Severe dysgeusia is significantly correlated with xerostomia. Taste score significantly worsened 1month post-therapy |
Chen et al., (2015) Taiwan [20] | Prospective | Oral cavity | All 8 I/II 69 III/IV | 77 | RT | MMA-MSS-moo | 0–4–8 | Taste alterations represent the main symptom correlated to radiation-induced oral mucositis. Taste score significantly worsened 4- and 8-months post-therapy. |
Fang et al., (2014) China [31] | Prospective | Oral cavity | III/IV | 49 | RS + Flap + ND | UW-QOL (v.4) | 12 | Free-flap reconstruction significantly improves the taste function compared to no-free flap reconstruction. |
Agarwal et al., (2014) India [32] | Prospective | Tongue | All | 39 | RS + ND +RT | UW-QOL (v.4) | 0–12 | Taste score is significantly worst 12-months post-therapy compared to baseline. |
Tomita et al., (2014) Japan [6] | Case Control | Tongue | All | 39 | CMT + RS +Flap + ND | Chemical Gustometry | 0 | Dysgeusia: 50% Taste threshold of cases treated by partial glossectomy is significant lower respect to controls. Conservation of > 50% of tongue significantly improves the taste function. |
Fang et al., (2013) China [33] | Prospective | Tongue FOM | All 5 I/II 16 III/IV | 21 | RS + Flap | UW-QOL (v.4) | 12 | Taste score is one of the worst domains. No significant different between partial and subtotal glossectomy. |
Zhang et al., (2013) China [34] | Case control | Tongue | All 48 I/II 15 III/IV | 63 | RS | UW-QOL (v.4) | 12 | Patients < 40 years have a significantly worse taste score compared to patients > 40 years. Taste represents the worst domain. |
Oskam et al., (2013) Netherlands [17] | Prospective | Oral cavity Oropharynx | III/IV | 80 27 | RS + Flap + RT | QOL-H&N35 | 0–6–12 96–132 | Long-term survival patients show significant better taste score at baseline and 1-year post-therapy, compared to nonsurvival patients. |
Elfring et al., (2012) Canada [35] | Case Control | Oropharynx | All | 60 | RS + Flap +/- RT or CMT | Chemical Gustometry | 0 | Affected side of cases have significant worse taste functions compare to controls and to unaffected patients’ side. |
Airoldi et al., (2011) Italy [36] | Cross-sectional | Oral cavity | All 8 I/II 28 III/IV | 36 | RS + Flap + RT | QOL-H&N 35 Dische scale | 0 | Dysgeusia: 33% Ageusia: 31% |
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Togni, L.; Mascitti, M.; Vignini, A.; Alia, S.; Sartini, D.; Barlattani, A.; Emanuelli, M.; Santarelli, A. Treatment-Related Dysgeusia in Oral and Oropharyngeal Cancer: A Comprehensive Review. Nutrients 2021, 13, 3325. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu13103325
Togni L, Mascitti M, Vignini A, Alia S, Sartini D, Barlattani A, Emanuelli M, Santarelli A. Treatment-Related Dysgeusia in Oral and Oropharyngeal Cancer: A Comprehensive Review. Nutrients. 2021; 13(10):3325. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu13103325
Chicago/Turabian StyleTogni, Lucrezia, Marco Mascitti, Arianna Vignini, Sonila Alia, Davide Sartini, Alberta Barlattani, Monica Emanuelli, and Andrea Santarelli. 2021. "Treatment-Related Dysgeusia in Oral and Oropharyngeal Cancer: A Comprehensive Review" Nutrients 13, no. 10: 3325. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu13103325
APA StyleTogni, L., Mascitti, M., Vignini, A., Alia, S., Sartini, D., Barlattani, A., Emanuelli, M., & Santarelli, A. (2021). Treatment-Related Dysgeusia in Oral and Oropharyngeal Cancer: A Comprehensive Review. Nutrients, 13(10), 3325. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu13103325