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PRO Hair Safe Study: The Patient's Perspective on the Effects of Scalp Cooling on Hair Preservation.

Authors :
Brunner, Christine
Egle, Daniel
Ritter, Magdalena
Kofler, Ricarda
Giesinger, Johannes M
Schneitter, Lisa
Sztankay, Monika
Emmelheinz, Miriam
Azim, Samira Abdel
Wieser, Verena
Oberguggenberger, Anne
Source :
Breast Cancer: Targets & Therapy; Jul2023, Vol. 15, p485-494, 10p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Purpose: Alopecia has been reported a distressing side-effect of chemotherapy for breast cancer patients (BCP) that is highly relevant for quality of life during treatment. For the prevention of chemotherapy-induced alopecia, scalp cooling (SC) has been reported to be an effective and safe intervention. However, data on the patient's perspective on effectiveness and applicability of SC in a clinical routine setting are scarce. In this comparative study, we aimed at a longitudinal assessment of patient-reported outcome (PRO) data on the effect of SC on alopecia and its effect on symptoms and functional health when applied in clinical routine in BCP receiving taxane or anthracycline-based chemotherapy.Patients and Methods: Study participants were allocated either to the intervention group receiving SC or to the control group based on patient preference (non-randomized study). All patients completed PRO-measures on hair preservation (EORTC Item Library items on hair loss), symptom and functional health measures (EORTC QLQ-C30 and -BR23) and the Body Image Scale (BIS). Outcomes were assessed at chemotherapy start (baseline), mid-chemotherapy, last chemotherapy cycle, 3 months follow-up and 6– 9 months follow-up.Results: Overall, we included 113 patients: 75 patients underwent SC (mean age = 51.3 years, 52.7% premenopausal); 38 patients standard care (mean age = 55.6 years, 39.5% premenopausal). A total of 53 patients (70.7%) discontinued SC, with 39 patients (73.5%) stating alopecia as the primary reason. On average, BCP stayed on treatment with the cooling cap for 40.2% of the duration of their chemotherapy (SD 25.3%). In an intention-to-treat analysis, we found no difference between the SC group and the control group with regard to their patient-reported hair loss (p=0.831) across the observation period, overall QOL (p=0.627), emotional functioning (p=0.737), social functioning (p=0.635) and body image (p=0.463) did not differ between groups.Conclusion: We found a high rate of SC-decliners and no beneficial effects of SC for patient-reported hair loss, symptoms and functional health. The efficacy and tolerability of SC applied in a clinical routine setting hence appeared to be limited. The further determination and up-front definition of criteria prognostic for effectiveness of SC may be helpful to identify patient subgroups that may experience a treatment benefit. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
11791314
Volume :
15
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Breast Cancer: Targets & Therapy
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
169917769
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2147/BCTT.S412338