Abstract

This study analyzes the factors contributing to the duration of severe oral mucositis in oncopediatric patients. A longitudinal study was conducted in the pediatric department of a cancer referral hospital between 2013 and 2017. Seventy-three patients diagnosed with cancer undergoing chemotherapy protocols were analyzed. Oral evaluations were performed using the Modified Oral Assessment Guide criteria, and the data were collected from the patients’ records. The Kaplan-Meier method was used to estimate survival curves. Most patients were males (52.1%), of mixed race (“pardo”) (49.3%), with a mean age of 7.56 years (±5.34). There was a predominance of patients diagnosed with solid tumors (52.1%), with no metastasis (86.3%), using natural product chemotherapeutics (56.2%), who had not undergone a bone marrow transplant (97.3%); amputation was observed in 35.6% of patients, while death rates were as high as 8.2%. The survival analysis estimated a mean time of 30.6 days until complete remission of severe oral mucositis. The regression analysis showed that patients over 10 years old had a median mucositis duration 1.4 times greater than those at the age of 10 years or younger. Patients without metastasis had a median mucositis duration 1.7 times greater than those with metastasis (p-value ≤ 0.10). Increasing age and the absence of metastasis were conditions that prolonged the duration of severe oral mucositis.

Highlights

  • Cancer is a disease in which patient survival is associated with the diagnosis time and disease stage at diagnosis [1]

  • This study was conducted in the Pediatric Department of Napoleão Laureano Hospital in the city of João Pessoa, Paraíba state (PB), Northeastern Brazil, which is a referral center for the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of cancer for the entire state of Paraíba

  • The antineoplastic protocols were found to be as follows: use of chemotherapeutic agents alone (n = 46; 63.0%); chemotherapy associated with surgery (n = 19; 26.0%); a combination of chemotherapy, radiotherapy and surgery (n = 5, 6.8%); and chemotherapy associated with radiotherapy (n = 3; 41.8%)

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Summary

Introduction

Cancer is a disease in which patient survival is associated with the diagnosis time and disease stage at diagnosis [1]. It is ranked as the second cause of death in Brazil and accounts for 13% of the deaths worldwide [2]. Adverse effects of childhood cancer treatment are common in the oral cavity, the most common being mucositis, xerostomia and infections caused by viruses, fungi or bacteria. Public Health 2018, 15, 1153; doi:10.3390/ijerph15061153 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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