Oral Mucosal Injury Caused by Targeted Cancer Therapies

Author:

Carrozzo M1,Eriksen J Grau2,Bensadoun R -J3,Boers-Doets C B45,Lalla R V6,Peterson D E7

Affiliation:

1. Center for Oral Health Research, Oral Medicine Department, School of Dental Sciences, Newcastle University, UK

2. Department of Experimental Clinical Oncology, Aarhus University Hospital, Aarhus, Denmark

3. Institut Niçois de Cancérologie (INC), Centre de Haute Energie, Nice, France

4. CancerMed, Department of Medical Strategy, Wormer, The Netherlands

5. Impaqtt Foundation, Department of Adverse Event Research & Valorisation, Wormer, The Netherlands

6. Section of Oral Medicine, Department of Oral Health & Diagnostic Sciences, School of Dental Medicine, UConn Health, Farmington, CT

7. Section of Oral Medicine, Department of Oral Health & Diagnostic Sciences, School of Dental Medicine & Neag Comprehensive Cancer Center, UConn Health, Farmington, CT

Abstract

AbstractTargeted cancer therapies have fundamentally transformed the treatment of many types of cancers over the past decade, including breast, colorectal, lung, and pancreatic cancers, as well as lymphoma, leukemia, and multiple myeloma. The unique mechanisms of action of these agents have resulted in many patients experiencing enhanced tumor response together with a reduced adverse event profile as well. Toxicities do continue to occur, however, and in selected cases can be clinically challenging to manage. Of particular importance in the context of this monograph is that the pathobiology for oral mucosal lesions caused by targeted cancer therapies has only been preliminarily investigated. There is distinct need for novel basic, translational, and clinical research strategies to enhance design of preventive and therapeutic approaches for patients at risk for development of these lesions. The research modeling can be conceptually enhanced by extrapolating “lessons learned” from selected oral mucosal conditions in patients without cancer as well. This approach may permit determination of the extent to which pathobiology and clinical management are either similar to or uniquely distinct from oral mucosal lesions caused by targeted cancer therapies. Modeling associated with oral mucosal disease in non-oncology patients is thus presented in this context as well. This article addresses this emerging paradigm, with emphasis on current mechanistic modeling and clinical treatment. This approach is in turn designed to foster delineation of new research strategies, with the goal of enhancing cancer patient treatment in the future.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology,General Medicine

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