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Annals of palliative medicine 2018-Apr

A pilot study with palonosetron in the prophylaxis of radiation-induced nausea and vomiting.

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Vithusha Ganesh
Leah Drost
Carlo DeAngelis
Bo Angela Wan
Mark Pasetka
Stephanie Chan
Liying Zhang
May Tsao
Elizabeth Barnes
Natalie Pulenzas

Keywords

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Palonosetron is an effective antiemetic in chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting (CINV), but has yet to be studied in the radiation setting. The purpose of the present study was to investigate the efficacy and safety of palonosetron in the prophylaxis of radiation-induced nausea and vomiting (RINV).

METHODS

Patients without existing nausea and vomiting undergoing palliative radiotherapy to sites with emetic risk were prescribed palonosetron 0.5 mg orally before the start of radiation treatment, and every other day until completion of treatment. Patients were followed up in acute (day 1 of treatment to day 1 after treatment) and delayed phases (days 2-10 after treatment). The primary endpoint was control of vomiting. Complete control was defined as no use of rescue medication and no episodes of nausea or vomiting. Secondary endpoints included control of nausea and quality of life (QOL). QOL was assessed with the Functional Living Index-Emesis and the European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer QOL Questionnaire-Core 15 Palliative (C15-PAL).

RESULTS

In all evaluable patients (n=75), complete control of vomiting was 93.3% in the acute phase and 93.2% in the delayed phase. Complete control of nausea was 74.7% in the acute phase and 74.0% in the delayed phase.

CONCLUSIONS

Results suggest improved control in RINV compared to historical reports with first generation serotonin receptor antagonists (RA). A randomized study will be needed to confirm this finding.

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