4.4 Review

Ototoxicity prognostic models in adult and pediatric cancer patients: a rapid review

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JOURNAL OF CANCER SURVIVORSHIP
卷 17, 期 1, 页码 82-100

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SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11764-022-01315-8

关键词

Adverse drug reaction reporting systems; Antineoplastic protocols; Audiology; Audiometry; Pure-tone; Drug monitoring; Hearing loss; High frequency; Ototoxicity

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This article reviews the literature on predictive models for estimating the risk of chemotherapy-related auditory injury in cancer patients. The study suggests that future research should adopt a transdisciplinary approach to define a unified set of predictors and calls for the development of a flexible model that can forecast the post-treatment audiogram.
PurposeA cornerstone of treatment for many cancers is the administration of platinum-based chemotherapies and/or ionizing radiation, which can be ototoxic. An accurate ototoxicity risk assessment would be useful for counseling, treatment planning, and survivorship follow-up in patients with cancer.MethodsThis systematic review evaluated the literature on predictive models for estimating a patient's risk for chemotherapy-related auditory injury to accelerate development of computational approaches for the clinical management of ototoxicity in cancer patients. Of the 1195 articles identified in a PubMed search from 2010 forward, 15 studies met inclusion for the review.ConclusionsAll but 1 study used an abstraction of the audiogram as a modeled outcome; however, specific outcome measures varied. Consistently used predictors were age, baseline hearing, cumulative cisplatin dose, and radiation dose to the cochlea. Just 5 studies were judged to have an overall low risk of bias. Future studies should attempt to minimize bias by following statistical best practices including not selecting multivariate predictors based on univariate analysis, validation in independent cohorts, and clearly reporting the management of missing and censored data. Future modeling efforts should adopt a transdisciplinary approach to define a unified set of clinical, treatment, and/or genetic risk factors. Creating a flexible model that uses a common set of predictors to forecast the full post-treatment audiogram may accelerate work in this area. Such a model could be adapted for use in counseling, treatment planning, and follow-up by audiologists and oncologists and could be incorporated into ototoxicity genetic association studies as well as clinical trials investigating otoprotective agents.Implications for Cancer SurvivorsImprovements in the ability to model post-treatment hearing loss can help to improve patient quality of life following cancer care. The improvements advocated for in this review should allow for the acceleration of advancements in modeling the auditory impact of these treatments to support treatment planning and patient counseling during and after care.

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