Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
About
Background. Mucositis is a complication of chemotherapy with no effective treatment. Aim.To evaluate the efficacy of sub-microbial doses of doxycycline hyclate in preventing the development of oral mucositis in patients with acute leukemia (AL) treated with induction chemotherapy.
Hypothesis. Doxycycline hyclate administration in sub-microbial dosage will reduce the incidence of oral mucositis in patients with AL who receive induction chemotherapy.
Methods. Double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trial. At the Cancer National Institute (INCan), adult patients (> 18 years of age) with acute leukemia of recent diagnosis, scheduled to receive induction chemotherapy will be enrolled in the study. Written informed consent from the patients will be obtained preceding inclusion in the study.
At baseline and 3-times per week, during 21-days, patients will have an oral examination performed using the Oral Mucositis Assessment Scale (OMAS), oral pain, difficulty to swallow, and salivary flow measurements will be recorded.
A sample size of 164 subjects has been calculated, 74 subjects in each arm of the study. The primary end point of this study to evaluate the efficacy will be the proportion of patients treated with doxycycline or placebo without oral lesions associated with OM, during the 21 days of follow-up. Efficacy will be evaluated if the proportion of complete response (CR) is significantly higher than the proportion of events in the placebo group. Additional secondary endpoints will be the partial resolution of the oral lesions, the incidence of infections and the mortality in the study groups during the 21 days of follow-up. Results will be analyzed by using Chi-squared test and Wilcoxon-Mann-Whitney rank sum test.
Full description
Background. Mucositis is a complication of chemotherapy with no effective treatment.
Aim.To evaluate the efficacy of sub-microbial doses of doxycycline hyclate in preventing the development of oral mucositis in patients with acute leukemia (AL) treated with induction chemotherapy.
Hypothesis. Doxycycline hyclate administration in sub-microbial dosage will reduce the incidence of oral mucositis in patients with AL who receive induction chemotherapy.
Methods. Double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trial. At the Cancer National Institute (INCan), adult patients (> 18 years of age) with acute leukemia of recent diagnosis, scheduled to receive induction chemotherapy will be enrolled in the study. Written informed consent from the patients will be obtained preceding inclusion in the study.
Stratification according to the type of acute leukemia (myeloblastic and lymphoblastic) will be done. Random number tables will be used with balance for every four subjects; coded boxes will be utilized to preserve double blinding. Patients will be randomly assigned to receive either a sub-microbial dose of doxycycline hyclate or placebo (50 mg per day), immediately before the initiation of induction chemotherapy and daily during the following 21 days after chemotherapy.
At baseline and 3-times per week, during 21-days, patients will have an oral examination performed using the Oral Mucositis Assessment Scale (OMAS). Also oral pain and difficulty to swallow will be recorded using a visual analogue scale. Also in each visit, salivary flow measurements (Schirmer's test modified version) will be done.
The OMAS system is a validated index that evaluates the severity of oral mucositis by measuring the degree of ulceration/pseudomembrane and erythema in nine sites of the oral mucosa (upper and lower lip, right and left inner cheek, right and left ventral and lateral tongue, floor of the mouth, soft palate/fauces and hard palate). At each site, erythema is evaluated using a 3-point scale (0=none, 1=mild/moderate, 2=severe), and ulceration/pseudomembrane formation is evaluated using a 4-point scale (0=none, 1=cumulative surface area <1 cm2, 2=cumulative surface area 1-3 cm2, 3=cumulative surface area >3 cm2). The value of OMAS will be obtained by summing the erythema and ulceration/pseudomembrane sub-scores at each site and then averaging these scores across the affected sites.
In order to rule out oral candidosis (OC), definitive diagnosis of OC requires the identification of pseudohyphae in exfoliative cytology samples stained with periodic acid Schiff. Likewise, the clinical diagnosis of herpes simplex virus (HSV) induced oral lesions will be confirmed by the virus-infected cells demonstrated in cytologic smears stained with Papanicolaou, and/or a clinical response to systemic antiviral therapy with acyclovir.
A sample size of 164 subjects has been calculated, 74 subjects in each arm of the study. This estimate is based in the incidence of OM that is higher than 40% in patients with AL, and considering its reduction to half (20%), assuming an alpha value of 0.05 (one-sided) and a minimum statistical power of 0.80.
The efficacy primary end point of this study will be the proportion of patients treated with doxycycline or placebo without oral lesions associated with OM, in the 21 days of follow-up. Efficacy will be evaluated if the proportion of complete response (CR) is significantly higher than the proportion of events in the placebo group. Additional secondary endpoints will be the partial resolution of the oral lesions, the incidence of infections and the mortality in the study groups during the 21 days of follow-up.
Statistical analysis. Results will be analysed by using Chi-squared test and Wilcoxon-Mann-Whitney rank sum test.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
164 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Central trial contact
Gabriela Anaya-Saavedra, PhD; Velia Ramirez-Amador, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal