Modeling the risk of hearing loss from radiation therapy in childhood cancer survivors: A PENTEC comprehensive review Review


Authors: Murphy, B.; Jackson, A.; Bass, J. K.; Tsang, D. S.; Ronckers, C. M.; Kremer, L.; Baliga, S.; Olch, A.; Zureick, A. H.; Jee, K. W.; Constine, L. S.; Yock, T. I.
Review Title: Modeling the risk of hearing loss from radiation therapy in childhood cancer survivors: A PENTEC comprehensive review
Abstract: Purpose: The Pediatric Normal Tissue Effects in the Clinic (PENTEC) hearing loss (HL) task force reviewed investigations on cochlear radiation dose-response relationships and risk factors for developing HL. Evidence-based dose-response data are quantified to guide treatment planning. Methods and Materials: A systematic review of the literature was performed to correlate HL with cochlear dosimetry. HL was considered present if a threshold exceeded 20 dB at any frequency. Radiation dose, ototoxic chemotherapy exposure, hearing profile including frequency spectra, interval to HL, and age at radiation therapy (RT) were analyzed. Results: Literature was systematically reviewed from 1970 to 2021. This resulted in 739 abstracts; 19 met inclusion for meta-analysis, and 4 included data amenable to statistical modeling. These 4 studies included 457 cochleas at risk in patients treated with RT without chemotherapy, and 398 cochlea treated with chemotherapy. The incidence and severity of cochlear HL from RT exposure alone is related to dose and age. Risk of HL was <5% in cochlea receiving a mean dose ≤35 Gy but increased to 30% at 50 Gy. HL risk ranged from 25% to 40% in children under the age of 5 years at diagnosis, declining to 10% in older children for any radiation dose. Probability of similar severe HL occurred at doses 18.3 Gy higher for children <3 versus >3 years of age. High-frequency HL was most common, with average onset occurring 3.6 years (range, 0.4-13.2 years) after RT. Exposure to platinum-based chemotherapies added to the rates of HL at a given cochlear dose level, with 300 mg/m2 shifting the dose response by 7 Gy. Conclusions: In children treated with RT alone, risk of HL was low for cochlear dose <35 Gy and rose when dose exceeded 35 Gy without clear RT dose dependence. High-frequency HL was most prevalent, but all frequencies were affected. Children younger than 5 years were at highest risk of developing HL, although independent effects of dose and age were not fully elucidated. Future reports with more granular data are needed to better delineate time to onset of HL and the effects of chemoradiotherapy. © 2023
Keywords: adolescent; cancer survival; child; preschool child; child, preschool; cisplatin; dose response; chemotherapy; carboplatin; computer assisted tomography; radiotherapy dosage; radiotherapy; incidence; risk factors; combination chemotherapy; patient monitoring; age factors; risk factor; central nervous system tumor; radiation response; age; cancer survivor; risk assessment; dose-response relationship, radiation; infant; radiation effects; systematic review; dosimetry; probability; diagnosis; medulloblastoma; normal tissue; hearing impairment; meta analysis; hearing loss; head and neck tumor; ototoxicity; evidence-based; frequency; cancer survivors; audition; cochlea; childhood cancer survivor; task force; organs at risk; audiography; hearing test; humans; human; male; female; article; protective agent; x-ray computed tomography; childhood cancers; dose response relationships; additive effect; radiation dose response; high frequency hf; relationship factors
Journal Title: International Journal of Radiation Oncology, Biology, Physics
Volume: 119
Issue: 2
ISSN: 0360-3016
Publisher: Elsevier Inc.  
Date Published: 2024-06-01
Start Page: 446
End Page: 456
Language: English
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijrobp.2023.08.016
PUBMED: 37855793
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Source: Scopus
Altmetric
Citation Impact
BMJ Impact Analytics
MSK Authors
  1. Andrew Jackson
    253 Jackson