CLINICAL TRIAL, PHASE II
JOURNAL ARTICLE
RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL
RESEARCH SUPPORT, NON-U.S. GOV'T
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A prospective, three-arm, randomized trial of EGCG for preventing radiation-induced esophagitis in lung cancer patients receiving radiotherapy.

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: This trial investigated whether epigallocatechin-3-gallate (EGCG), a radioprotector, could be effective in the prevention and treatment of acute radiation-induced esophagitis (ARIE).

METHODS AND MATERIALS: This is a phase II study of EGCG combined with chemoradiation in unresectable stage III non-small-cell lung cancer or limited stage small cell lung cancer. Patients were randomized into a prophylactic EGCG group (arm A), a therapeutic EGCG group after the occurrence of esophagitis (arm B) or conventional therapy group (arm C). Esophagitis grades, pain and dysphagia scores were recorded weekly. Adjusted esophagitis index (AEI), pain index (API) and dysphagia index (ADI) were calculated to reflect changes in esophagitis grade, pain score and dysphagia score throughout treatment.

RESULTS: A total of 83 patients were eligible for toxicity analysis (arm A vs arm B vs arm C: N = 28:27:28). There was no significant difference in the baseline characteristics among three arms of the patients. The difference in the maximum esophagitis grade among three groups was statistically significant (P = 0.004). The maximum ARIE for patients with EGCG was significantly lower than for those with conventional therapy. The mean AEI of arm A was lower than that of arm B, while the mean AEI of arm C was the highest (arm A vs arm B, P = 0.028; arm B vs arm C, P = 0.002). Furthermore, API and ADI were significantly lower in patients receiving EGCG than in conventionally treated patients.

CONCLUSION: The application of EGCG could effectively alleviate acute radiation esophagitis in advanced lung cancer without obvious side effects. Prophylactic application of EGCG had a slight advantage over therapeutic use in treatment of acute esophagitis.

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