van As Jorrit W, van den Berg Henk, van Dalen Elvira C
c/o Cochrane Childhood Cancer, Emma Children's Hospital/Academic Medical Center, PO Box 22660, Amsterdam, Netherlands, 1100 DD.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2016 Aug 3;2016(8):CD010181. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD010181.pub2.
Platinum-based therapy, including cisplatin, carboplatin, oxaliplatin or a combination of these, is used to treat a variety of paediatric malignancies. Unfortunately, one of the most important adverse effects is the occurrence of hearing loss or ototoxicity. There is a wide variation in the reported prevalence of platinum-induced ototoxicity and the associated risk factors. More insight into the prevalence of and risk factors for platinum-induced hearing loss is essential in order to develop less ototoxic treatment protocols for the future treatment of children with cancer and to develop adequate follow-up protocols for childhood cancer survivors treated with platinum-based therapy.
To evaluate the existing evidence on the association between childhood cancer treatment including platinum analogues and the occurrence of hearing loss.
We searched the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL) (2015, Issue 8), MEDLINE (PubMed) (1945 to 23 September 2015) and EMBASE (Ovid) (1980 to 23 September 2015). In addition, we searched reference lists of relevant articles and the conference proceedings of the International Society for Paediatric Oncology (2008 to 2014), the American Society of Pediatric Hematology/Oncology (2008 to 2015) and the International Conference on Long-Term Complications of Treatment of Children and Adolescents for Cancer (2010 to 2015). Experts in the field provided information on additional studies.
All study designs, except case reports, case series (i.e. a description of non-consecutive participants) and studies including fewer than 100 participants treated with platinum-based therapy who had an ototoxicity assessment, examining the association between childhood cancer treatment including platinum analogues and the occurrence of hearing loss.
Two review authors independently performed the study selection. One review author performed data extraction and risk of bias assessment, which was checked by another review author.
We identified 13 eligible cohort studies including 2837 participants with a hearing test after treatment with a platinum analogue for different types of childhood cancers. All studies had methodological limitations, with regard to both internal (risk of bias) and external validity. Participants were treated with cisplatin, carboplatin or both, in varying doses. The reported prevalence of hearing loss varied considerably between 0% and 90.1%; none of the studies provided data on tinnitus. Three studies reported a prevalence of 0%, but none of these studies provided a definition for hearing loss and there might be substantial or even complete overlap in included participants between these three studies. When only studies that did provide a definition for hearing loss were included, the prevalence of hearing loss still varied widely between 1.7% and 90.1%. All studies were very heterogeneous with regard to, for example, definitions of hearing loss, used diagnostic tests, participant characteristics, (prior) anti-tumour treatment, other ototoxic drugs and length of follow-up. Therefore, pooling of results was not possible.Only two studies included a control group of people who had not received platinum treatment. In one study, the prevalence of hearing loss was 67.1% (95% confidence interval (CI) 59.3% to 74.1%) in platinum-treated participants, while in the control participants it was 7.4% (95% CI 6.2% to 8.8%). However, hearing loss was detected by screening in survivors treated with platinum analogues and by clinical presentation in control participants. It is uncertain what the effect of this difference in follow-up/diagnostic testing was. In the other study, the prevalence of hearing loss was 20.1% (95% CI 17.4% to 23.2%) in platinum-treated participants and 0.4% (95% CI 0.12% to 1.6%) in control participants. As neither study was a randomized controlled trial or controlled clinical trial, the calculation of a risk ratio was not feasible as it is very likely that both groups differed more than only the platinum treatment.Only two studies evaluated possible risk factors using multivariable analysis. One study identified a significantly higher risk of hearing loss in people treated with cisplatin 400 mg/m(2) plus carboplatin 1700 mg/m(2) as compared to treatment with cisplatin 400 mg/m(2) or less, irrespective of the definition of hearing loss. They also identified a significantly higher risk of hearing loss in people treated with non-anthracycline aminoglycosides antibiotics (using a surrogate marker) as compared to people not treated with them, for three out of four definitions of hearing loss. The other study reported that age at treatment (odds ratio less than 1 for each single-unit increase) and single maximum cisplatin dose (odds ratio greater than 1 for each single-unit increase) were significant predictors for hearing loss, while gender was not.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: This systematic review shows that children treated with platinum analogues are at risk for developing hearing loss, but the exact prevalence and risk factors remain unclear. There were no data available for tinnitus. Based on the currently available evidence we can only advise that children treated with platinum analogues are screened for ototoxicity in order to make it possible to diagnose hearing loss early and to take appropriate measures. However, we are unable to give recommendations for specific follow-up protocols including frequency of testing. Counselling regarding the prevention of noise pollution can be considered, such as the use of noise-limiting equipment, avoiding careers with excess noise and ototoxic medication. Before definitive conclusions on the prevalence and associated risk factors of platinum-induced ototoxicity can be made, more high-quality research is needed. Accurate and transparent reporting of findings will make it possible for readers to appraise the results of these studies critically.
铂类疗法,包括顺铂、卡铂、奥沙利铂或这些药物的联合使用,被用于治疗多种儿童恶性肿瘤。不幸的是,最重要的不良反应之一是听力丧失或耳毒性的发生。铂类诱导的耳毒性的报告患病率以及相关危险因素存在很大差异。为了制定未来治疗儿童癌症时耳毒性较小的治疗方案,并为接受铂类疗法治疗的儿童癌症幸存者制定适当的随访方案,深入了解铂类诱导听力丧失的患病率和危险因素至关重要。
评估包括铂类类似物在内的儿童癌症治疗与听力丧失发生之间关联的现有证据。
我们检索了Cochrane对照试验中心注册库(CENTRAL)(2015年第8期)、MEDLINE(PubMed)(1945年至2015年9月23日)和EMBASE(Ovid)(1980年至2015年9月23日)。此外,我们还检索了相关文章的参考文献列表以及国际儿科肿瘤学会(2008年至2014年)、美国儿科血液学/肿瘤学会(2008年至2015年)和儿童及青少年癌症治疗长期并发症国际会议(2010年至2015年)的会议论文集。该领域的专家提供了其他研究的信息。
除病例报告、病例系列(即对非连续参与者的描述)以及纳入接受铂类疗法治疗且进行耳毒性评估的参与者少于100人的研究外,所有研究设计,均用于研究包括铂类类似物在内的儿童癌症治疗与听力丧失发生之间的关联。
两位综述作者独立进行研究选择。一位综述作者进行数据提取和偏倚风险评估,另一位综述作者进行核对。
我们确定了13项符合条件的队列研究,包括2837名在接受铂类类似物治疗不同类型儿童癌症后进行听力测试的参与者。所有研究在内部(偏倚风险)和外部有效性方面均存在方法学局限性。参与者接受了不同剂量的顺铂、卡铂或两者联合治疗。报告的听力丧失患病率在0%至90.1%之间差异很大;没有一项研究提供耳鸣数据。三项研究报告患病率为0%,但这些研究均未提供听力丧失的定义,且这三项研究纳入的参与者可能存在大量甚至完全重叠。当仅纳入确实提供了听力丧失定义的研究时,听力丧失的患病率仍在1.7%至90.1%之间广泛变化。所有研究在例如听力丧失的定义、使用的诊断测试、参与者特征、(之前的)抗肿瘤治疗、其他耳毒性药物和随访时间等方面都非常异质。因此,无法汇总结果。
只有两项研究纳入了未接受铂类治疗的对照组。在一项研究中,接受铂类治疗的参与者中听力丧失的患病率为67.1%(95%置信区间(CI)59.3%至74.1%),而对照组参与者中为7.4%(95%CI 6.2%至8.8%)。然而,接受铂类类似物治疗的幸存者通过筛查检测听力丧失,而对照组参与者通过临床表现检测。随访/诊断测试中的这种差异的影响尚不确定。在另一项研究中,接受铂类治疗的参与者中听力丧失的患病率为20.1%(95%CI 17.4%至23.2%),对照组参与者中为0.4%(95%CI 0.12%至1.6%)。由于两项研究均不是随机对照试验或对照临床试验,计算风险比不可行,因为很可能两组之间的差异不仅仅在于铂类治疗。
只有两项研究使用多变量分析评估了可能的危险因素。一项研究发现,与接受400mg/m²或更低剂量顺铂治疗相比,接受400mg/m²顺铂加1700mg/m²卡铂治疗的人发生听力丧失的风险显著更高,无论听力丧失的定义如何。他们还发现,对于四种听力丧失定义中的三种,与未接受非蒽环类氨基糖苷类抗生素治疗的人相比,接受此类抗生素治疗的人(使用替代标志物)发生听力丧失的风险显著更高。另一项研究报告称,治疗时的年龄(每增加一个单位比值比小于1)和单次最大顺铂剂量(每增加一个单位比值比大于1)是听力丧失的显著预测因素,而性别不是。
本系统评价表明,接受铂类类似物治疗的儿童有发生听力丧失的风险,但确切的患病率和危险因素仍不清楚。没有关于耳鸣的数据。基于目前可得的证据,我们只能建议对接受铂类类似物治疗的儿童进行耳毒性筛查,以便能够早期诊断听力丧失并采取适当措施。然而,我们无法就包括检测频率在内的具体随访方案给出建议。可以考虑提供关于预防噪音污染的咨询,例如使用噪音限制设备、避免从事有过多噪音的职业以及避免使用耳毒性药物。在能够就铂类诱导的耳毒性的患病率和相关危险因素得出明确结论之前,需要更多高质量的研究。准确和透明地报告研究结果将使读者能够批判性地评估这些研究的结果。