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Efficacy of Acupuncture in Radiotherapy-induced Dysphagia in Patients With Head and Neck Cancer

Sun Yat-sen University logo

Sun Yat-sen University

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Acupuncture

Treatments

Procedure: acupuncture

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03336775
20160301

Details and patient eligibility

About

Purpose:

Rationale: Acupuncture is a therapy for physical activity disorders secondary to nervous diseases, and it may have therapeutic effects on dysphagia caused by radiation therapy.

Purpose: This randomized trial aims to investigate whether acupuncture may alleviate radiation-induced dysphagia in patients with head and neck cancer. The effect was compared with outcomes in patients without receiving acupuncture.

Full description

OBJECTIVE

Primary:

To determine the therapeutic efficacy of acupuncture on radiotherapy-induced dysphagia in patients with head and neck cancer.

Secondary:

  1. To determine whether acupuncture can improve swallow function in these patients.
  2. To determine what extent acupuncture can improve the complications of dysphagia of these patients, including the incidence of aspiration pneumonia, malnutrition.
  3. To determine what extent this traditional Chinese therapy can improve quality of life of these patients.
  4. To evaluate the safety of acupuncture in these patients.

OUTLINE: This is a randomized study. Patients are randomized to 1 of 2 treatment arms.

Arm I: Patients receive acupuncture for 30 minutes per day for up to 20 sessions (over 4 weeks). These patients also received corticosteroid for 4 weeks, methylprednisolone 80mg ivdrip. for 3 days, 60mg ivdrip. for 3 days, 40mg ivdrip. for 3 days, 30mg po. for 7 days, 20mg po. for 7 days, 10mg po. for 5 days and maintain. Patients undergo VFSS before, at end of therapy (week 4) and 3 months (week 16) after therapy. Swallowing function, outcomes of dysphagia, including incidence of aspiration pneumonia, nutritional status change, and QOL change are assessed at baseline, week 4 and week 16.

Arm Ⅱ: Patients receive corticosteroid only, and the use of corticosteroid is the same with Arm I. Patients undergo VFSS before, at end of therapy (week 4) and 3 months (week 16) after therapy. Swallowing function, outcomes of dysphagia, including incidence of aspiration pneumonia, nutritional status change, and QOL change are assessed at baseline, week 4 and week 16.

Enrollment

142 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Patients must have received radiation therapy for histologically confirmed head and neck cancer;
  2. Prior irradiation >/= 6 months prior to study entry;
  3. Age>/= 18 years;
  4. Routine laboratory studies with bilirubin </=2 * upper limits of normal (ULN), aspartate aminotransferase (AST or SGOT) < 2 * ULN, creatinine <1.5 * ULN, red-cell count >/= 4,000 per cubic millimeter; white-cell count >/=1500 per cubic millimeter, platelets >/= 75,000 per cubic millimeter; PT, APTT, INR in a normal range;
  5. Ability to understand and willingness to sign a written informed consent document, or constant caregivers who well understand and willingness to sign a written informed consent document.

Exclusion criteria

  1. Evidence of metastatic disease or tumor recurrence, tumor invasion to major vessels (e.g. the carotid);
  2. Evidence of very high intracranial pressure that suggests brain hernia and need surgery;
  3. History of seizures or bleeding related to tumor or radiotherapy during or after the completion of radiation;
  4. History of coagulation defects or allergy history of contrast agent;
  5. History of disorder that affects swallowing, including brain stroke, oral or throat disease, malignances diseases, infection of the nervous system, demyelinating disease, neurodegenerative disease, advanced dementia, diabetes, peripheral vascular disease, HIV infection, familial degenerative peripheral neuropathy;
  6. Severe complications: 1) New York heart association grade II or greater congestive heart failure; 2) Serious and inadequately controlled cardiac arrhythmia; 3) Significant vascular disease (e.g. aortic aneurysm, history of aortic dissection); 4) Clinically significant peripheral vascular disease; 5) significant uncontrolled life-threatening infection;
  7. Prior use of acupuncture for dysphagia;
  8. Enrolled in other clinical trials.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Supportive Care

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

142 participants in 2 patient groups

acupuncture
Experimental group
Description:
Patients receive acupuncture for 30 minutes per day for up to 20 sessions (over 4 weeks). These patients also received corticosteroid for 4 weeks, methylprednisolone 80mg ivdrip. for 3 days, 60mg ivdrip. for 3 days, 40mg ivdrip. for 3 days, 30mg po. for 7 days, 20mg po. for 7 days, 10mg po. for 5 days and maintain.
Treatment:
Procedure: acupuncture
control
No Intervention group
Description:
Patients receive no acupuncture. The use of corticosteroid is the same with Arm I.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Yamei Tang

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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