Peterson Douglas E, O'Shaughnessy Joyce A, Rugo Hope S, Elad Sharon, Schubert Mark M, Viet Chi T, Campbell-Baird Cynthia, Hronek Jan, Seery Virginia, Divers Josephine, Glaspy John, Schmidt Brian L, Meiller Timothy F
School of Dental Medicine and Neag Comprehensive Cancer Center, UConn Health, Farmington, Connecticut.
Texas Oncology-Baylor Charles A. Sammons Cancer Center, Dallas, Texas.
Cancer Med. 2016 Aug;5(8):1897-907. doi: 10.1002/cam4.761. Epub 2016 Jun 23.
In recent years oral mucosal injury has been increasingly recognized as an important toxicity associated with mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) inhibitors, including in patients with breast cancer who are receiving everolimus. This review addresses the state-of-the-science regarding mTOR inhibitor-associated stomatitis (mIAS), and delineates its clinical characteristics and management. Given the clinically impactful pain associated with mIAS, this review also specifically highlights new research focusing on the study of the molecular basis of pain. The incidence of mIAS varies widely (2-78%). As reported across multiple mTOR inhibitor clinical trials, grade 3/4 toxicity occurs in up to 9% of patients. Managing mTOR-associated oral lesions with topical oral, intralesional, and/or systemic steroids can be beneficial, in contrast to the lack of evidence supporting steroid treatment of oral mucositis caused by high-dose chemotherapy or radiation. However, steroid management is not uniformly efficacious in all patients receiving mTOR inhibitors. Furthermore, technology does not presently exist to permit clinicians to predict a priori which of their patients will develop these lesions. There thus remains a strategic need to define the pathobiology of mIAS, the molecular basis of pain, and risk prediction relative to development of the clinical lesion. This knowledge could lead to novel future interventions designed to more effectively prevent mIAS and improve pain management if clinically significant mIAS lesions develop.
近年来,口腔黏膜损伤越来越被认为是一种与雷帕霉素哺乳动物靶点(mTOR)抑制剂相关的重要毒性反应,包括在接受依维莫司治疗的乳腺癌患者中。本综述阐述了关于mTOR抑制剂相关性口腔炎(mIAS)的科学现状,并描述了其临床特征及管理方法。鉴于mIAS会引起具有临床影响的疼痛,本综述还特别强调了聚焦于疼痛分子基础研究的新进展。mIAS的发生率差异很大(2%-78%)。在多项mTOR抑制剂临床试验中报告显示,高达9%的患者会出现3/4级毒性反应。与缺乏证据支持用类固醇治疗高剂量化疗或放疗引起的口腔黏膜炎不同,局部口服、病灶内注射和/或全身使用类固醇治疗mTOR相关的口腔病变可能有益。然而,类固醇治疗并非对所有接受mTOR抑制剂治疗的患者都有效。此外,目前还没有技术能让临床医生预先预测哪些患者会出现这些病变。因此,在战略上仍需要明确mIAS的病理生物学、疼痛的分子基础以及与临床病变发生相关的风险预测。如果出现具有临床意义的mIAS病变,这些知识可能会带来新的未来干预措施,旨在更有效地预防mIAS并改善疼痛管理。