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Mucositis consists of inflammation of the mucosal membrane and is a prominent cause of patient discomfort during cancer therapy. In children receiving chemotherapy, the incidence of oral mucositis is reported to be between 40%-70%. Curcumin, a commonly-used spice in India and Southeast Asia, was shown in animal models to prevent chemotherapy and radiotherapy induced mucositis. We hypothesize that curcumin may prevent oral mucosal injury and reduce the severity of oral mucositis in children receiving chemotherapy. Thus, the aim of this study is to determine whether in children undergoing doxorubicin-containing chemotherapy, does supplementation of curcumin, when compared to placebo, decrease oral mucositis both by objective (mucositis scales) and subjective (pain scale) measurements. Effective prevention and reduction of mucosal injury may significantly improve the care we provide to children undergoing therapy for cancer.
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Children older than 5 years of age diagnosed with cancer and treated at the Pediatric Hematology/Oncology unit, Hadassah Medical Center will be eligible to the study. The study is designed as a cross-over study, wherein each patient serves as his or her own control, thus all included children should be scheduled to receive at least two identical curses of doxorubicin-containing chemotherapy in which the dose of doxorubicin is at least 60mg/m2 per course. The patients will be assigned to randomly receive curcumin or placebo in the 1st course, with the other regimen administered at the 2nd course. Curcumin will be given as fluid extract (1:1) at a dose of 10 drops, three times a day. Adolescents and young adults will receive the adult recommend dose, i.e. 30 drops, three times a day. Placebo will be given at the same dose. The patients will be taught to rinse the mouth with the medicine and than spit out. The therapy will be given from a day prior to the first day of the cycle for two weeks. A diary kept by the family will record each given dose. Possible side effects associated with the study drug, such as vomiting, nausea, rash, etc., will be recorded. No other adjunctive topical treatment will be used during the study. Adherence will be assessed through subject reports as well as by review of returned medications every cycle collected during the objective assessment site visits. Given the intent-to-treat analysis, all participants will be included irrespective of how much of the study medication was taken.The measurements of study outcome, i.e. OMAS score, WHO mucositis scale and visual analogue pain scale will be done on day 1,7,10,14,21 ± 1 of each chemotherapy cycle. The following data will be recorded in all cycles: duration of neutropenia, the need and length of hospitalization, use and dosage of opioid analgesia, need for total potential nutrition, blood culture positive infection and other mucositis related complications.
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8 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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