Department of Pediatric Oncology, Princess Máxima Center for Pediatric Oncology, Utrecht, the Netherlands.
Department of Pediatric Oncology, Erasmus Medical Center-Sophia Children's Hospital, Rotterdam, the Netherlands.
JAMA Oncol. 2021 Oct 1;7(10):1550-1558. doi: 10.1001/jamaoncol.2021.2697.
Ototoxicity is an irreversible direct and late effect of certain childhood cancer treatments. Audiologic surveillance during therapy as part of the supportive care pathway enables early detection of hearing loss, decision-making about ongoing cancer treatment, and, when applicable, the timely use of audiologic interventions. Pediatric oncologic clinical practice and treatment trials have tended to be driven by tumor type and tumor-specific working groups. Internationally accepted standardized recommendations for monitoring hearing during treatment have not previously been agreed on.
To provide standard recommendations on hearing loss monitoring during childhood cancer therapy for clinical practice.
An Ototoxicity Task Force was formed under the umbrella of the International Society of Paediatric Oncology, consisting of international audiologists, otolaryngologists, and leaders in the field of relevant pediatric oncology tumor groups. Consensus meetings conducted by experts were organized, aimed at providing standardized recommendations on age-directed testing, timing, and frequency of monitoring during cancer treatment based on literature and consensus. Consensus statements were prepared by the core group, adapted following several videoconferences, and finally agreed on by the expert panel.
The consensus reached was that children who receive ototoxic cancer treatment (platinum agents, cranial irradiation, and/or brain surgery) require a baseline case history, monitoring of their middle ear and inner ear function, and assessment of tinnitus at each audiologic follow-up. As a minimum, age-appropriate testing should be performed before and at the end of treatment. Ideally, audiometry with counseling before each cisplatin cycle should be considered in the context of the individual patient, specific disease, feasibility, and available resources.
This is an international multidisciplinary consensus report providing standardized supportive care recommendations on hearing monitoring in children undergoing potentially ototoxic cancer treatment. The recommendations are intended to improve the care of children with cancer and facilitate comparative research on the timing and development of hearing loss caused by different cancer treatment regimens.
耳毒性是某些儿童癌症治疗的一种不可逆的直接和迟发性副作用。作为支持性护理途径的一部分,在治疗期间进行听力学监测可以早期发现听力损失,为正在进行的癌症治疗做出决策,并且在适用时及时进行听力学干预。儿科肿瘤临床实践和治疗试验往往由肿瘤类型和肿瘤特异性工作组驱动。以前尚未就治疗期间监测听力达成国际公认的标准化建议。
为儿童癌症治疗期间的听力损失监测提供临床实践的标准建议。
在国际小儿肿瘤学会的框架下成立了耳毒性工作组,由国际听力学家、耳鼻喉科医生和相关儿科肿瘤学肿瘤组领域的领导者组成。组织专家进行共识会议,旨在根据文献和共识为癌症治疗期间的年龄导向测试、时机和监测频率提供标准化建议。核心小组编写了共识声明,在几次视频会议后进行了修改,最终由专家小组达成一致。
达成的共识是,接受耳毒性癌症治疗(铂类药物、颅照射和/或脑部手术)的儿童需要进行基线病史、中耳和内耳功能监测以及每次听力学随访时的耳鸣评估。作为最低要求,应在治疗前后进行适合年龄的测试。理想情况下,应根据患者的具体情况、疾病、可行性和可用资源,在每个顺铂周期前考虑进行听力测试和咨询。
这是一份国际多学科共识报告,提供了关于接受潜在耳毒性癌症治疗的儿童进行听力监测的标准化支持性护理建议。这些建议旨在改善癌症儿童的护理,并促进不同癌症治疗方案引起的听力损失的时间和发展的比较研究。