Author:
McGinnis W L,Loprinzi C L,Buskirk S J,Sloan J A,Drummond R G,Frank A R,Shanahan T G,Kahanic S P,Moore R L,Schild S E,Humphrey S L
Abstract
PURPOSE To determine whether a sucralfate oral solution can prevent/alleviate radiation-induced esophagitis. PATIENTS AND METHODS Patients included on this clinical trial were beginning thoracic radiation therapy to the mediastinum. Following stratification, they were randomized, in a double-blind manner, to receive a sucralfate solution or an identical-appearing placebo solution. Esophagitis was measured by physicians who used standard criteria and also by patients who used short questionnaires completed weekly during the course of the trial. RESULTS A total of 97 assessable patients were entered onto this clinical trial. During the first 2 weeks of the study, two placebo patients (4%) stopped their study medication, compared with 20 sucralfate patients (40%). This was related to substantially increased incidences of gastrointestinal toxicity (58% of sucralfate patients v 14% of placebo patients; P > .0001). There was no substantial benefit from the sucralfate in terms of esophagitis scores. CONCLUSION This oral sucralfate solution does not appear to inhibit radiation-induced esophagitis and is associated with disagreeable gastrointestinal side effects in this patient population.
Publisher
American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)
Cited by
51 articles.
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