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Journal of Oncology Practice, Vol 4, No 6 (November), 2008: pp. 277-279 © 2008 American Society of Clinical Oncology. DOI: 10.1200/JOP.0868502
American Society of Clinical Oncology 2008 Clinical Practice Guideline Update Summary: Use of Chemotherapy and Radiation Therapy Protectants
ASCO recently convened an update committee of the expert panel on the use of chemotherapy and radiation therapy protectants to review ASCO's Clinical Practice Guideline on this topic. In 2002, ASCO updated the original 1999 guideline. This 2008 updated guideline addresses the role of currently available chemotherapy and radiation therapy protectants in decreasing the incidence and/or the severity of toxicities associated with the use of chemotherapy and radiation therapy to treat cancer. The updated guideline includes a new section on the use of palifermin to prevent mucositis associated with stem cell transplantation, and discusses the use of amifostine for the prevention of radiation-associated esophagitis. The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved palifermin, a recombinant keratinocyte growth factor, for prophylaxis against severe mucositis associated with hematopoietic stem-cell transplant (HSCT) in hematologic malignancies. For several recommendations, there was no new evidence and those recommendations remain unchanged. Due to the large number of recommendations in this guideline, this summary describes only those which changed. A complete list of recommendations is available online www.asco.org/guidelines/protectant.
Use of Dexrazoxane for Patients Receiving High-Dose Anthracycline Therapy Because there were no new data on the use of dexrazoxane or on the clinical use of high-dose anthracyclines, the panel felt a recommendation on this topic had limited clinical relevance and deleted its previous recommendation.
Amifostine Use in Chemotherapy-Associated Toxicities: Neutropenia The panel found that across all studies considered, reports of benefit were inconsistent, specifically whether use of amifostine resulted in lower frequencies of grades 3 to 4 neutropenia. The only large randomized trial published since 2002 showed a significantly lower frequency of grades 3 to 4 neutropenia in the amifostine arm. The panel continues to recommend that amifostine may be considered for reduction of the frequency of grade 3 or 4 of chemotherapy-associated neutropenia, but suggests that clinicians consider alternative strategies to ameliorate neutropenia, such as the use of myeloid growth factors and/or chemotherapy dose reduction.
Amifostine Use in Chemotherapy-Associated Toxicities: Thrombocytopenia
Amifostine Use in Chemotherapy-Associated Toxicities: Neurotoxicity or Ototoxicity
Dose and Administration of Amifostine With Chemotherapy
Amifostine Use in Radiation Therapy–Associated Toxicities: Xerostomia
Amifostine Use in Radiation Therapy–Associated Toxicities: Mucositis
Amifostine Use in Radiation Therapy–Associated Toxicities: Esophagitis
Palifermin is new to the guideline. Mucositis is a common adverse effect of autologous and allogeneic HSCT and can be severe. Palifermin acts on epithelial tissue to protect it from chemotherapy and radiation-induced mucosal injury. There are no data to support using palifermin in the nonstem-cell transplantation setting or in the treatment of solid tumors.
Palifermin Use in Autologous HSCT Because the incidence of severe mucositis is also high with autoHSCT conditioning regimens that include involved-field radiotherapy to the oral cavity, oropharynx, and/or esophagus, palifermin may be considered. The panel cautions, however, that data are lacking from randomized controlled trials to support this extrapolation for palifermin use to non-TBI conditioning regimens. Given insufficient data, palifermin is not recommended for routine use for patients undergoing autologous HSCT for a hematologic malignancy with a chemotherapy-only conditioning regimen.
Palifermin Use in Allogeneic HSCT
Dose and Administration of Palifermin With HSCT
There were no changes to recommendations regarding Mesna.
Finally, although the update committee did not conduct a cost-effectiveness analysis on chemotherapy and radiation therapy protectants, they did include information on these agents' costs in the full-text guideline.
Clinicians should apprise patients of the risks and benefits of these chemotherapy and radiation therapy protectant agents and that the goal of the use of these agents is ameliorating the toxicities of treatment. Clinicians and patients should understand that these agents have not been shown to increase disease-free or overall survival, nor have they been shown to allow greater doses to be delivered or to prevent treatment delays. The short-term adverse effects of the chemo- and radiation therapy protectant agents have generally been well-characterized (eg, hypotension and nausea with amifostine; rash/erythema with palifermin), and in some studies have led to high rates of discontinuation of use of the proctectant agent.
Methodology
Journal of Clinical Oncology published a full-text version of this guideline online ahead of print on November 17, 2008. The full-text is available at www.asco.org/guidelines/protectant, along with a slide set and several summary tables. A patient guide is available at www.cancer.net.
The American Society of Clinical Oncology 2008 Clinical Practice Guideline Update: Use of Chemotherapy and Radiation Therapy Protectants was developed and written by Martee L. Hensley, Karen L. Hagerty, Tarun Kewalramani, Daniel M. Green, Neal J. Meropol, Todd H. Wasserman, Gary I. Cohen, Bahman Emami, William J. Gradishar, R. Brian Mitchell, J. Tate Thigpen, Andy Trotti, III, Daniel von Hoff, and Lynn M. Schuchter for the Expert Panel on the Use of Chemotherapy and Radiation Therapy Protectants.
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Copyright © 2008 by the American Society of Clinical Oncology, Online ISSN: 1935-469X. Print ISSN: 1554-7477
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