Taste, Altered Clinical Trial
Official title:
Efficacy of Zinc Sulfate on Concurrent Chemoradiotherapy Induced Taste Alterations in Oral Cancer Patients- A Double Blind Randomized Controlled Trial
Verified date | January 2019 |
Source | Dow University of Health Sciences |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
Taste changes are common in cancer patients receiving concurrent chemoradiation which become
a significant complaint and a cause of distress and morbidity. Loss of gustatory function
further advances to malnutrition, weight loss, reduced quality of life, poor compliance and
even diminished response to drug therapy. Taste is an essential sensation which serves oral
intake of food and enables to prevent the ingestion of potentially harmful and poisonous
substances. The sense of taste is crucial for an individual's well-being and psychological
health. Taste changes may advance to reduced appetite, dietary insufficiency, food repulsion
affecting body weight and anorexia further leading to impaired immunity, decline in health
status and malnutrition. As taste impairment is not a life-threatening event therefore it
might not be reported by some patients. Hence, this aspect is neglected despite being a
common and distressing side-effect of chemoradiation. Due to the location of the cancer and
the long-term effects of cancer therapies, patients with oral cavity cancers have a specially
high prevalence of chemosensory disorders. Zinc is comparatively non-toxic if taken orally,
and rather non-toxic in contrast to other trace metals such as manganese and iron. Zinc is an
integral element in both the maintenance and repair of taste buds. It is involved in
promoting the diffusion of taste stimuli to taste buds. Salivary zinc has been found in
association with Gustin (carbonic anhydrase, CA VI), a zinc-metalloprotein enzyme that may be
involved with providing nutrition to the human taste buds. Zinc influences the synthesis of
gustin required for the growth, development, maintenance and production of taste buds and
regulation of taste function.
The hypothesis was:
Null hypotheses: There is no difference in the taste acuity between test and control group
with the administration of zinc sulfate.
Alternative hypotheses: There is a difference in the taste acuity between test and control
group with the administration of zinc sulfate.
Thus, the present study aimed to observe changes in taste function of oral cancer patients by
detection and recognition thresholds before beginning their treatment (before chemoradiation
and intervention), at the end of chemoradiation and a month after and to evaluate the
preventive effect of zinc sulfate on chemoradiation-induced taste changes. To the best of our
knowledge, similar study has not been conducted before in our region.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 70 |
Est. completion date | November 26, 2018 |
Est. primary completion date | October 18, 2018 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 20 Years to 60 Years |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Oral cancer patients undergoing concurrent chemotherapy with radiotherapy for the first time as a single treatment modality. - Patients aged between 20-60 years. - Radiation planned between 60-70 Gy of external beam radiotherapy. - Cisplatin as primary chemotherapeutic agent. Exclusion Criteria: - Previous history of radiotherapy or chemotherapy regardless of time. - Existence of oral lesions such as aphthous ulcers, stomatitis or candidosis at the time of selection. - Cranial nerve lesions of V, VII, IX and partial or total glossectomy. - Individuals with nose or ear infections which can influence taste, metabolic or endocrine disorders that may affect taste sensitivity (Sjogren syndrome, hypertension, diabetes mellitus, renal disease, liver disease and thyroid disease). - Concomitant administration of a drug with Chemoradiation which may affect taste (metronidazole, diuretics and anti-depressants). - Individuals already on medications associated with taste disturbances such as penicillamine, tetracyclines, quinolones, and bisphosphonates for any existing condition. - Patients who didn't agree to participate and sign consent form and lack of cooperation |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Pakistan | Dow University of Health Sciences | Karachi | Sindh |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Dow University of Health Sciences |
Pakistan,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Change in taste acuity with the administration of zinc sulfate in oral cancer patients receiving chemo-radiotherapy by detection and recognition threshold on a proforma | Every participant's taste acuity was by detection and recognition using different concentrations of taste solutions. The solutions were prepared in accordance with the International Standard Organization 3972:2011/Cor 1:2012 which provides guidelines for Method of investigating of taste sensitivity. Sodium chloride was used as a stimulus for salty, sucrose for sweet, citric acid for sour and caffeine for bitter. Detection threshold was the minimum concentration at which the subject can detect that there is something different from water, but may not identify its quality. Recognition threshold was considered as the lowest level of a solution at which a subject can correctly recognize its taste. | Taste acuity was observed for each taste at 3 stages that is, Baseline: before starting chemo-radiotherapy, after 7-8 week (on last day of chemo-radiotherapy), 11-12 week (follow-up after 1 month of their therapy) |
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