Clinical practice guidelines for the prevention and treatment of cancer therapy-induced oral and gastrointestinal mucositis
The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center · UConn Health · +5 more institutions
Abstract
Oral and gastrointestinal (GI) mucositis can affect up to 100% of patients undergoing high-dose chemotherapy and hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, 80% of patients with malignancies of the head and neck receiving radiotherapy, and a wide range of patients receiving chemotherapy. Alimentary track mucositis increases mortality and morbidity and contributes to rising health care costs. Consequently, the Multinational Association of Supportive Care in Cancer and the International Society for Oral Oncology assembled an expert panel to evaluate the literature and to create evidence-based guidelines for preventing, evaluating, and treating mucositis.
Thirty-six panelists reviewed literature published between January 1966 and May 2002. An initial meeting in January 2002 produced a preliminary draft of guidelines that was reviewed at a second meeting the same year. Thereafter, a writing committee produced a report on mucositis pathogenesis, epidemiology, and scoring (also included in this issue), as well as clinical practice guidelines.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 41.59
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 207
Authors
10Topics & keywords
- Mucositis
- Medicine
- Intensive care medicine
- Radiation therapy
- Cancer
- Clinical trial
- MEDLINE
- Head and neck cancer
- Good health and well-being