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Immunotherapy-Related Oral Adverse Effects: Immediate Sequelae, Chronicity and Secondary Cancer

SIMPLE SUMMARY: This paper characterizes the immunotherapy-related adverse effects in the oral tissues, in a large series of patients. This includes a description of the severity of oral symptoms, immediate clinical presentation, treatment, chronicity despite holding the immunotherapy, and the devel...

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Autores principales: Elad, Sharon, Yarom, Noam, Zadik, Yehuda
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10571987/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37835475
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers15194781
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author Elad, Sharon
Yarom, Noam
Zadik, Yehuda
author_facet Elad, Sharon
Yarom, Noam
Zadik, Yehuda
author_sort Elad, Sharon
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: This paper characterizes the immunotherapy-related adverse effects in the oral tissues, in a large series of patients. This includes a description of the severity of oral symptoms, immediate clinical presentation, treatment, chronicity despite holding the immunotherapy, and the development of oral cancer. The management of these patients exemplified new diagnostic tools, detailed clinical presentation that may assist to differentiate between various oral irAEs and outlines unique adjustments in the topical treatment and inclusion of a new treatment modality for these irAEs. Lastly, this paper raises the awareness for second primary oral cancer and possible risk for oral malignant transformation. ABSTRACT: (1) Background: Immunotherapy-related adverse effects (irAEs) have been reported to manifest in oral tissues, mainly as lichenoid and non-lichenoid lesions and salivary gland dysfunction; however, the characterization of oral irAEs and their clinical impact is limited. (2) Methods: This is a retrospective clinical chart review of 14 patients with oral irAEs, describing the impact of the oral irAEs in terms of the immediate effect, treatment, chronicity of the irAEs and the development of oral cancer. (3) Results: Common symptoms were pain and dry mouth, causing no-to-severe pain and/or dry mouth sensation. The immediate sequala ranged from sensitivity to certain foods up to elimination of oral intake. Treatment included conventional palliation techniques with or without systemic steroids. Discontinuation of the immunotherapy agents was required in 6 patients. Innovative treatment modalities included photobiomodulation for oral mucosal pain relief, and salivary gland intraductal irrigations for relief of salivary gland hypofunction. Late sequala included the development of proliferative leukoplakia and oral cancer. (4) Conclusions: Patients treated with immunotherapy may develop debilitating oral irAEs. They should be followed for oral involvement so treatment may be initiated when the symptoms are mild to avoid discontinuation of the immunotherapy. Patients that develop oral lichenoid lesions should receive long-term follow-up, as they may have higher risk for oral cancer.
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spelling pubmed-105719872023-10-14 Immunotherapy-Related Oral Adverse Effects: Immediate Sequelae, Chronicity and Secondary Cancer Elad, Sharon Yarom, Noam Zadik, Yehuda Cancers (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: This paper characterizes the immunotherapy-related adverse effects in the oral tissues, in a large series of patients. This includes a description of the severity of oral symptoms, immediate clinical presentation, treatment, chronicity despite holding the immunotherapy, and the development of oral cancer. The management of these patients exemplified new diagnostic tools, detailed clinical presentation that may assist to differentiate between various oral irAEs and outlines unique adjustments in the topical treatment and inclusion of a new treatment modality for these irAEs. Lastly, this paper raises the awareness for second primary oral cancer and possible risk for oral malignant transformation. ABSTRACT: (1) Background: Immunotherapy-related adverse effects (irAEs) have been reported to manifest in oral tissues, mainly as lichenoid and non-lichenoid lesions and salivary gland dysfunction; however, the characterization of oral irAEs and their clinical impact is limited. (2) Methods: This is a retrospective clinical chart review of 14 patients with oral irAEs, describing the impact of the oral irAEs in terms of the immediate effect, treatment, chronicity of the irAEs and the development of oral cancer. (3) Results: Common symptoms were pain and dry mouth, causing no-to-severe pain and/or dry mouth sensation. The immediate sequala ranged from sensitivity to certain foods up to elimination of oral intake. Treatment included conventional palliation techniques with or without systemic steroids. Discontinuation of the immunotherapy agents was required in 6 patients. Innovative treatment modalities included photobiomodulation for oral mucosal pain relief, and salivary gland intraductal irrigations for relief of salivary gland hypofunction. Late sequala included the development of proliferative leukoplakia and oral cancer. (4) Conclusions: Patients treated with immunotherapy may develop debilitating oral irAEs. They should be followed for oral involvement so treatment may be initiated when the symptoms are mild to avoid discontinuation of the immunotherapy. Patients that develop oral lichenoid lesions should receive long-term follow-up, as they may have higher risk for oral cancer. MDPI 2023-09-28 /pmc/articles/PMC10571987/ /pubmed/37835475 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers15194781 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Elad, Sharon
Yarom, Noam
Zadik, Yehuda
Immunotherapy-Related Oral Adverse Effects: Immediate Sequelae, Chronicity and Secondary Cancer
title Immunotherapy-Related Oral Adverse Effects: Immediate Sequelae, Chronicity and Secondary Cancer
title_full Immunotherapy-Related Oral Adverse Effects: Immediate Sequelae, Chronicity and Secondary Cancer
title_fullStr Immunotherapy-Related Oral Adverse Effects: Immediate Sequelae, Chronicity and Secondary Cancer
title_full_unstemmed Immunotherapy-Related Oral Adverse Effects: Immediate Sequelae, Chronicity and Secondary Cancer
title_short Immunotherapy-Related Oral Adverse Effects: Immediate Sequelae, Chronicity and Secondary Cancer
title_sort immunotherapy-related oral adverse effects: immediate sequelae, chronicity and secondary cancer
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10571987/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37835475
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers15194781
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