Abstract
Background
Oral mucositis occurs in patients undergoing chemoradiation for cancer treatment. It is believed that colonization of ulcerated mucosa by bacteria, fungi and virus results in secondary infections. The effect of chlorhexidine (CHX) on the incidence and severity of oral mucositis in cancer patients was evaluated in this review.
Methods
Studies were limited to randomized placebo-controlled trials. Three databases were searched: MEDLINE (via PubMed), Web of Science and the Cochrane Library up to May 25, 2016.
Results
Ninety-eight abstracts were evaluated by three independent reviewers. Twelve studies met the criteria for inclusion. Four of these studies were assessed at unclear risk of bias and eight of them at high risk. Of the 12 studies, 9 were included in two meta-analyses. Pooled results showed that chlorhexidine did not significantly reduce incidence of mucositis compared to placebo (p=0.129), nor chlorhexidine did significantly reduce the severity of mucositis (p=0.127), though subgroup analysis in the chemotherapy group showed a trend toward significance (p=0.054). Side-effects reported in the included studies were teeth staining and altered taste perception.
Conclusions
This systematic review found that chlorhexidine is not significantly effective in reducing the severity of mucositis (moderate quality of evidence) nor in preventing the incidence of mucositis (low quality of evidence). However, more studies are needed in patients receiving chemotherapy only, as a positive trend toward significance was found (p=.054).
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