Markiewicz, M., Dzierzak-Mietla, M., Frankiewicz, A., Zielinska, P., Koclega, A., Kruszelnicka, M., & Kyrcz-Krzemien, S. (2012). Treating oral mucositis with a supersaturated calcium phosphate rinse: comparison with control in patients undergoing allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. Supportive Care in Cancer, 20, 2223–2229.
To evaluate the efficacy of supersaturated calcium phosphate rinse (SCPR) with customary care (topical mouth solutions) on measures of severity and consequent interventions and complications
In the treatment group, patients rinsed their mouths four times daily with the SCPR. In the control group, patients received customary topical mouth care with the extract of salvia leaves (twice daily), providone-iodine mouth solution (1% water solution of iodide with polyvinylpyrrolidone) once daily, and fluconazole mouth solution (50 mg fluconazole, 50 mg glycerine, 10 g vitamin A, and 10 g vitamin E with or without 2.5 g benzociaine) twice daily.
The SCPR treatment was administered from the first day of conditioning until patients reached the absolute neutrophil count of greater or equal to 0.2 g/l (a value that was considered an indication of the beginning of neutrophil recovery). Patients self-assessed the level of pain in the mouth and pharynx using a 0–10 visual analog scale (VAS) and measured swallowing problems using a 0–5 VAS.
The same experienced hematologist performed a physical examination of the oral cavity each day throughout the study, ranking cases according to the World Health Organization (WHO) scale for grading oral toxic effects of cancer treatment.
This was a single-site study conducted in an inpatient setting. The study was conducted at the Department of Hematology and Bone Marrow Transplantation at the Medical University of Silesia in Katowice, Poland, in 2009.
This was a prospective randomized, non-blinded, controlled trial with 40 consecutive patients undergoing allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT). Half of the patients received treatment with the supersaturated rinse, and the remaining half received customary care with topical mouth solutions. Patients enrolled in this study underwent transplantation in the Medical University of Silesia in Katowice, Poland, in 2009.
The World Health Organization scale (WHO) was used to measure severity of mucositis. Duration was recorded in days. Peak mean pain in mouth was recorded using a 0–10 visual analog scale (VAS). Peak mean swallowing problems were recorded using a 0–5 VAS. Days to absolute neutrophil count of more than 0.5 g/L and days to platelets of more than 20 g/L were recorded.
Interventions and complications were measured in terms of duration of analgesics used (days), duration of total parenteral nutrition (TPN) (days), use of granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF), incidence of acute graft-versus-host disease (aGVHD), degree of aGVHD, and incidence of infectious complications.
The findings in this prospective randomized, controlled study confirm findings in a 1992 report of a double-blind, prospective, randomized, controlled trial of 95 patients undergoing HSCT. In that trial, SCPR produced statistically significantly lower measures of pain duration, disease course duration, use of analgesics (morphine), and duration of time to absolute neutrophil recovery than did a fluoride rinse, demonstrating the SCPR regimen has a significant positive effect on oral mucositis associated with chemotherapy and radiotherapy.
These results warrant confirmation in controlled, multicenter, randomized trials. The use of a supersaturated calcium phosphate rinse holds promise for the prevention and early resolution of oral mucositis and appears to have no significant side effects when used four times daily in patients receiving stem cell transplant.