Source: Elsevier Global Medical News

 

SAN FRANCISCO (EGMN) – Lymphedema is highly common and a source of considerable morbidity among patients who undergo treatment for head and neck cancer, finds a cross-sectional study among 103 survivors.

Fully three-fourths had developed some degree of lymphedema, according to results presented at the annual Oncology Congress presented by Reed Medical Education. The more severe it was, the more likely patients were to have symptoms, functional impairments, and poorer quality of life.

Disease and treatment-related factors such as high radiation dose and combined surgery and radiation therapy were risk factors for the development of lymphedema.

“This is the first study that we are aware of in the United States of this depth to systematically examine lymphedema” in this population, noted lead investigator Jie Deng, Ph.D., R.N., O.C.N., a postdoctoral fellow at the Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn.

“Health care professionals should be aware that lymphedema is a frequent late effect in the head and neck cancer population,” she advised. “We need to educate patients about the risk of lymphedema prior to treatment, during treatment, and posttreatment, and we need to conduct external and internal examinations to evaluate related signs and symptoms at each clinic visit.”

Patients found to have any signs or symptoms should be referred for lymphedema assessment. Furthermore, “it’s very important we have very detailed documentation so we can follow up on patients’ treatment effect and also identify potential issues in this population,” Dr. Deng stressed. “An interdisciplinary approach is needed to best manage lymphedema.”

She and her colleagues are now evaluating interventions to treat head and neck lymphedema. Manual lymphatic drainage is one possibility. Elevating the head of the bed at night is another, as anecdotal comments suggest that symptoms worsen in the recumbent position.

“Patients will mention in the morning they feel more tightness, more fluid accumulated in the submental area; around noontime or afternoon, they feel it has drained by itself,” she explained.

There are more than half a million survivors of head and neck cancer in the United States, according to Dr. Deng. As a result of their disease and its treatment, these patients can develop both external lymphedema, causing symptoms such as facial puffiness, and internal lymphedema, causing issues such as epiglottal swelling.

The investigators studied adult patients treated for head and neck cancer at the Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center who were at least 3 months out from the end of their treatment and had no evidence of cancer. External lymphedema was assessed with a clinical exam, using the Foldi scale. Internal lymphedema was assessed with an endoscopic exam, using the Patterson scale for edema of the larynx and pharynx.

The patients were 60 years old, on average. The majority were male (69%) and white (89%). In terms of health behaviors, 66% had a history of smoking and 38% had a history of alcohol use.

In all, 81% of the patients had had locally advanced cancer, and 90% had received at least two treatment modalities. The median time since end of treatment was 20 months.

Study results, reported at the meeting and also recently published, showed that 75% of the patients overall had lymphedema of the head and neck; of those with lymphedema (61 out of 81), 10% had only the external kind, 39% had only the internal kind, and 51% had both (J. Pain Symptom Manage. 2011 July 29 [doi:10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2011.03.019]).

The type and severity of lymphedema were associated with both physical and psychological symptoms, Dr. Deng reported.

As the severity of lymphedema increased, patients were significantly more likely to report difficulty swallowing, issues with mucus or dry mouth, nutritional problems, pain, and voice problems (P = .001 to P = .047, depending on the type of lymphedema and the specific symptom).

Additionally, increasing severity was associated with poorer body image (P = .028 to P = .049). “However, there was no statistically significant relationship between lymphedema and anxiety and depressive symptoms,” she noted.

Lymphedema severity was also associated with hearing deficits, limitation of neck range of motion, and impaired quality of life (P = .004 to P = .045).

Analyses identified certain disease and treatment-related factors to be risk factors for the development of lymphedema, according to Dr. Deng.

Namely, patients were more likely to develop lymphedema if they had pharyngeal tumors; were a shorter time out from the end of treatment; received a high total dose of radiation, mirroring what has been seen in breast cancer; received a greater number of treatment modalities, a marker of treatment intensity; or had combined surgery and radiation therapy – specifically, either surgery plus postoperative radiation, or salvage surgery within the irradiated field – as compared with surgery alone.

The higher risk with shorter time since surgery hints that the lymphatics in the area may undergo regeneration over time, she speculated. “This was identified in the murine tail [model of lymphedema]; however, we didn’t know whether or not this phenomenon or similar exists in the head and neck cancer population.”

None of the demographic factors or health behaviors assessed were found to be risk factors for the development of lymphedema. But the lack of association between smoking and alcohol consumption and lymphedema may have been related to the fact that patients were asked whether they smoked or drank but not the intensity, or to the cross-sectional nature of the study, Dr. Deng noted. “In the future, longitudinal study is needed to examine whether or not these are risk factors,” she said.

This news story was resourced by the Oral Cancer Foundation, and vetted for appropriateness and accuracy.