Skin reaction to cetuximab as a criterion for treatment selection in head and neck cancer

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Abstract

Background/Aim: It can be hypothesized that in patients with locally advanced head and neck cancer and prominent cetuximab (CMb)-induced skin rash, immunoradiotherapy would result in a survival advantage over chemoradiotherapy with cisplatin (CP). Patients and Methods: After a loading dose of CMb, one weekly cycle of CMb and CP concurrently with RT, patients who developed a grade ≥2 rash proceeded with immunoradiotherapy, and those with a grade 0-1 rash had chemoradiotherapy. Results: A grade 3-4 allergic reaction to CMb developed in 11/39 (28.2%) patients and further recruitment was stopped. These patients proceeded treatment with CP. In early assessment of skin rash 10/28 patients qualified for chemoradiotherapy and 18/28 patients for immunoradiotherapy. There was no difference in survival between the two groups. Conclusion: Rate of serious CMb-induced hypersensitivity reactions was unacceptably high. Even though immunoradiotherapy was administered only to the prognostically most favorable group of patients, it resulted in no advantage over chemoradiotherapy.

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Strojan, P., Zakotnik, B., Zumer, B., Karner, K., Dremelj, M., Jančar, B., … Grašič-Kuhar, C. (2018). Skin reaction to cetuximab as a criterion for treatment selection in head and neck cancer. Anticancer Research, 38(7), 4213–4220. https://doi.org/10.21873/anticanres.12717

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