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Oral mucositis is a significant and common toxicity experienced by patients who receive high-dose chemotherapy as a preparatory regimen for a hematopoietic cell transplant (HCT). Furthermore, oral mucositis has been reported as the single most debilitating side effect reported by patients undergoing HCT. The incidence of HCT mucositis among adults is estimated to range between 76% and 89%; however, comparisons are difficult due to variability in patient ages, treatments and criteria for scoring oral mucositis.
The use of intra-oral photobiomodulation (PBM) therapy in adult patients after the development of oral mucositis is well documented and now included in the international mucositis guidelines, with limited evidence in pediatrics. This study will build evidence for the incorporation of extra-oral PBM therapy into daily nursing care of children and adolescents undergoing HCT. This intervention has potential in providing evidence for efficacy in the prevention and treatment of oral mucositis, the single most debilitating side effect reported by patients undergoing HCT.
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Full description
Children, adolescents and young adults admitted for an allogeneic HCT and those determined by the transplant team to be at risk for grade 3 oral mucositis will be eligible to receive PBM (34 x 660nm 10mW, 35 x 850nm 30mW: 1390 mW total power output) at an irradiance of 50mW/cm2. The PBM treatment will be administered via the THOR Model LX2M unit.
After low light therapy consent, participants will be offered the opportunity to receive a play-based preparation. Those who elect to receive this child life preparation will be scheduled to meet with a trained certified child life specialist (CCL) prior to admission. The play-based preparation will incorporate age and developmentally appropriate explanations of the non-invasive procedure and will be adapted to each patient's psychosocial and cognitive developmental needs.
Observation and treatment will begin the first day of conditioning (plus/minus 2 days). Those undergoing an allogeneic HCT will have treatment daily until Day +20 or engraftment (ANC ≥ 500 for two consecutive days). For those undergoing an autologous transplant, treatment will continue until engraftment (ANC ≥ 500 for two consecutive days) or until the patient is without mucositis for two consecutive days.
The PBM will be administered extra-oral and intra-oral by trained research staff. Direct aim of the laser into the eye will be avoided and safety spectacles will be used with laser therapy. The safety spectacles will be prescribed according to age, with the adjustable Ibis Infant eye protection for patients less than 1 year of age and the adjustable kids laser safety googles for the young child. Patients, staff, and observers will wear laser safety glasses while PBM is in use.
The parent may hold the device in place with assistance from the trained persons. After the initial LLLT treatment, a parent-reported satisfaction survey will be administered via paper questionnaire.
The observation of oral mucositis will be conducted by non-study staff and conducted as clinical care by the nurse, advanced practice provider and/or physician. Each patient will have a daily oral assessment, with documentation of mucositis, grade, duration, pain assessment, days of nutrition support, use of narcotics, positive oral and blood cultures. All patients will receive the standard mouth care regimen prescribed for transplant patients.
Each patient will be matched and compared to a previously treated patient. The comparison will be matched on primary disease, conditioning regimen, age and sex, with comparison of treatment variables of mucositis grade, duration, pain medications, days of nutritional support, blood and oral cultures, to day +20 or engraftment (depending upon which occurs first).
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43 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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