The Department of Gastroenterology, Lincoln County Hospital, United Lincolnshire Hospitals Trust, Greetwell Rd, Lincoln, LN2 5PT, UK.
The Biomedical Research Centre, Nottingham Digestive Diseases Centre, The School of Medicine, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK.
Support Care Cancer. 2021 Mar;29(3):1443-1453. doi: 10.1007/s00520-020-05610-x. Epub 2020 Jul 16.
The underlying mechanisms of chemotherapy-induced gastrointestinal (GI) symptoms are poorly researched. This study characterised the nature, frequency, severity and treatable causes for GI symptoms prospectively in patients undergoing chemotherapy for GI malignancy.
Patients receiving chemotherapy for a GI malignancy were assessed pre-chemotherapy, then monthly for 1 year using the Gastrointestinal Symptom Rating Scale, a validated patient-reported outcome measure. Patients with new, troublesome GI symptoms were offered investigations to diagnose the cause(s). Their oncologist was alerted when investigations were abnormal.
A total of 241 patients, 60% male, median age 63 years (range 30-88), were enrolled; 122 patients were withdrawn, 93%, because of progressive disease or death. During the study, > 20% patients reported chronic faecal incontinence and > 10% reported moderate or severe problems with taste, dysphagia, belching, heartburn, early satiety, appetite, nausea, abdominal cramps, peri-rectal pain, rectal flatulence, borborygmi, urgency of defecation or tenesmus. Thirty percent reported continuing passage of hard stools and 30% on-going diarrhoea. Moderate or severe fatigue affected 40% participants at its peak and persisted in 15% at 1 year. Toxicity dictated change in chemotherapy for 13-29% patients/month. Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events underestimated gastrointestinal morbidity. Pre-chemotherapy screening identified previously undiagnosed pathology: exocrine pancreatic insufficiency (9%), vitamin B deficiency (12%) and thyroid dysfunction (20%). Patients often refused investigations to diagnose their chemotherapy-induced symptoms; however, for every three investigations performed, one treatable cause was diagnosed: particularly small intestinal bacterial overgrowth (54%), bile acid malabsorption (43%), previously not described after chemotherapy, and unsuspected urinary tract infection (17%).
Patients undergoing chemotherapy for GI malignancy commonly have difficult GI symptoms requiring active management which does not occur routinely. The underlying causes for these symptoms are often treatable or curable. Randomised trials are urgently needed to show whether timely investigation and treatment of symptoms improve quality of life and survival.
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02121626.
化疗引起的胃肠道(GI)症状的潜在机制研究甚少。本研究前瞻性地描述了接受胃肠道恶性肿瘤化疗的患者的胃肠道症状的性质、频率、严重程度和可治疗原因。
在化疗前,使用胃肠道症状评定量表(一种经过验证的患者报告结局测量工具)对接受胃肠道恶性肿瘤化疗的患者进行评估,然后每月评估一次,为期 1 年。对于出现新的、麻烦的胃肠道症状的患者,提供检查以诊断病因。当检查结果异常时,通知他们的肿瘤医生。
共纳入 241 例患者,其中 60%为男性,中位年龄为 63 岁(范围为 30-88 岁);122 例患者因疾病进展或死亡而退出,占 93%。在研究期间,超过 20%的患者报告慢性粪便失禁,超过 10%的患者报告味觉、吞咽困难、打嗝、烧心、早饱、食欲、恶心、腹痛、直肠周围疼痛、直肠气胀、肠鸣音、排便紧迫感或里急后重有中度或重度问题。30%的患者报告持续排出硬便,30%的患者持续腹泻。40%的患者在高峰期出现中度或重度疲劳,15%的患者在 1 年后仍有疲劳。毒性导致每月 13-29%的患者改变化疗方案。常见不良事件术语标准低估了胃肠道发病率。化疗前筛查发现了以前未诊断的疾病:外分泌胰腺功能不全(9%)、维生素 B 缺乏(12%)和甲状腺功能障碍(20%)。患者通常拒绝进行检查以诊断其化疗引起的症状;然而,每进行三次检查,就诊断出一种可治疗的原因:特别是小肠细菌过度生长(54%)、胆酸吸收不良(43%),这两种情况以前在化疗后都没有描述过,还有未被怀疑的尿路感染(17%)。
接受胃肠道恶性肿瘤化疗的患者常有严重的胃肠道症状,需要积极管理,但这种情况并未常规发生。这些症状的潜在原因通常是可治疗或可治愈的。迫切需要进行随机试验,以证明及时检查和治疗症状是否能提高生活质量和生存率。
ClinicalTrials.gov 标识符:NCT02121626。