Division of Adult Audiology, Department of Otolaryngology-Head & Neck Surgery, Washington University School of Medicine in St Louis, St Louis, Missouri.
Executive Administration, Barnes-Jewish Hospital, St Louis, Missouri.
JAMA Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 2020 Feb 1;146(2):106-112. doi: 10.1001/jamaoto.2019.3550.
Accurate, accessible predictions of posttreatment hearing loss for patients with head and neck cancer prior to the initiation of treatment are a necessary part of informed patient decision-making.
To develop a prediction model for postradiotherapy and/or post-cisplatin chemotherapy hearing loss for patients with head and neck cancer.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: A retrospective cohort study was conducted at a tertiary academic medical center among 242 patients (482 ears) with head and neck cancer who were treated with radiotherapy and/or cisplatin from October 1, 2014, to July 31, 2018, and had follow-up audiometric data available.
Radiotherapy and cisplatin chemotherapy.
Patient hearing level, as measured by the mean of pure tone audiometry at 1, 2, and 4 kHz on completion of treatment. A multivariable mixed model for predicting the posttreatment pure tone average was developed using only information available to clinicians at the beginning of treatment.
A total of 242 patients (482 ears; 56 women and 186 men; mean [SD] age, 60 [10] years) were included in the analysis. All patients in the study received radiotherapy, and 105 (43.4%) received cisplatin chemotherapy. The mean (SD) total cumulative cisplatin dose was 298 (109) mg/m2. Patients' ears received a mean (SD) cochlear radiotherapy dose of 15 (13) Gy. The fixed-effects predictions from the predictive model agreed with 77% (95% CI, 73%-81%) of the variability in the posttreatment pure tone average. This predictive model also had a sensitivity of 80% and a specificity of 75% for predicting an observed posttreatment pure tone average greater than 35 dB (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve, 0.85).
To our knowledge, this study develops the first accurate prediction model of posttreatment hearing in patients with head and neck cancer that is feasible for use in the clinical setting before the initiation of treatment. This research confirms that exposure of the cochlea to cisplatin chemotherapy and radiotherapy is associated with hearing loss in patients with head and neck cancer. Finally, this research motivates future studies of ototoxic effects to better understand the adverse effects of head and neck cancer treatment.
在开始治疗前,准确、易于获取的头颈部癌症患者治疗后听力损失预测是患者知情决策的必要组成部分。
为头颈部癌症患者建立放疗和/或顺铂化疗后听力损失的预测模型。
设计、设置和参与者:这是一项回顾性队列研究,在一家三级学术医疗中心进行,纳入了 2014 年 10 月 1 日至 2018 年 7 月 31 日期间接受放疗和/或顺铂化疗且有随访听力测量数据的 242 例(482 耳)头颈部癌症患者。
放疗和顺铂化疗。
以治疗结束时纯音测听 1、2 和 4 kHz 平均听阈表示的患者听力水平。使用仅在治疗开始时可用于临床医生的信息,开发了一种预测治疗后纯音平均的多变量混合模型。
共纳入 242 例(482 耳;56 例女性和 186 例男性;平均[标准差]年龄 60[10]岁)患者进行分析。研究中的所有患者均接受放疗,105 例(43.4%)接受顺铂化疗。顺铂总累积剂量的平均值(标准差)为 298(109)mg/m2。患者的耳蜗接受了 15(13)Gy 的平均(标准差)放射剂量。预测模型的固定效应预测与治疗后纯音平均的 77%(95%CI,73%-81%)变异性一致。该预测模型对预测观察到的>35 dB 的治疗后纯音平均的灵敏度为 80%,特异性为 75%(接受者操作特征曲线下面积,0.85)。
据我们所知,本研究首次对头颈部癌症患者治疗后听力建立了准确的预测模型,在开始治疗前即可在临床环境中使用。本研究证实,顺铂化疗和放疗暴露于耳蜗与头颈部癌症患者的听力损失有关。最后,本研究激发了对耳毒性作用的进一步研究,以更好地了解头颈部癌症治疗的不良反应。