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Effectiveness of Thyme Honey in Management of Xerostomia in Post Radiation Cancer Patients

A

Ain Shams University

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 4

Conditions

Head and Neck Cancer Patients

Treatments

Drug: thyme honey mouth rinse
Drug: saline mouth rinse

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05859711
FDASU-REC 111

Details and patient eligibility

About

Xerostomia is the most frequent complication among patients who receive radiotherapy (RT) . The prevalence of xerostomia has been reported to be from 73.5% to 93% (Kakoei S.,2012). Damage to normal tissues can result by radiotherapy as it is not selective to cancer cells, and so affecting the quality of life of patients. Honey is one of the methods studied by CIM for management of HNC treatment side effects due to its properties. (Brennan et al., 2002; Clarkson et al., 2007; Furness et al., 2011;Hackett et al., 2015).

Thyme honey is a new alternative for management of xerostomia, which is a propolis gel product. Thyme honey is a variety of monofloral honey made from the nectar and pollen of thyme flowers. It has a strong antioxidant, antibacterial, antifungal and immuno modulating health effects. Due to the high sugar concentration in honey, it is believed that its presence in the oral cavity has a sialogogue effect, stimulating the salivary glands to produce saliva.

Full description

90 post radiation cancer patients were randomly assigned into two equal groups.The intervention group will have oral rinses (20 ml of thyme honey diluted in 100 ml of purified water) 3 times per day starting in the 4th week of radiotherapy and for one month after completion of radiotherapy. Patients in the control arm followed the same protocol with normal saline rinses. The treatment assessment of subjective dry mouth score, objective dry mouth score, salivary Ph and salivary flow rate will be carried out at baseline, 2 weeks and one month after starting of the treatment protocol (Charalambous et al., 2017).

Nitric oxide levels will be measured at baseline and after one month of treatment (Abadi et al., 2020).

Enrollment

90 patients

Sex

All

Ages

25 to 65 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patients referred to non-palliative head and neck radiotherapy
  • Total dose of radiation received (50-70 Gy)
  • Patients with complaint of xerostomia
  • Age 25-65 years old
  • Objective dry mouth score from ( 2-5)
  • Subjective dry mouth score from (1-4)
  • Undergoing radiotherapy for at least three weeks
  • Can independently complete the questionnaire

Exclusion criteria

  • Have confirmed systemic diseases or medications associated with xerostomia
  • Have a known allergy to honey
  • Patients who had salivary glands removal surgery
  • Patients with salivary gland diseases or malignancy
  • Vulnerable groups such as pregnant females, prisoners, mentally and physically handicapped individuals.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

90 participants in 2 patient groups

thyme honey
Experimental group
Description:
oral rinses (20 ml of thyme honey diluted in 100 ml of purified water) 3 times per day starting in the 4th week of radiotherapy and for one month after completion of radiotherapy. (Charalambous et al.,2017)
Treatment:
Drug: thyme honey mouth rinse
Saline
Active Comparator group
Description:
oral rinses with saline 3 times per day starting in the 4th week of radiotherapy and for one month after completion of radiotherapy.
Treatment:
Drug: saline mouth rinse

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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