Does hair curl variation influence the efficacy of scalp cooling in the prevention of chemotherapy-induced alopecia in breast cancer patients? A randomised pilot trial

SA Journal of Oncology

 
 
Field Value
 
Title Does hair curl variation influence the efficacy of scalp cooling in the prevention of chemotherapy-induced alopecia in breast cancer patients? A randomised pilot trial
 
Creator Obuseng, Odirile Khumalo, Nonhlanhla Naiker, Thurandrie Thebe, Tselane
 
Subject Onology; breast cancer; Dermatology; alopecia alopecia; breast cancer; chemotherapy; chemotherapy-induced alopecia; efficacy; hair curvature; scalp cooling
Description Background: Scalp cooling is reported to reduce Chemotherapy-induced alopecia (CIA).Aim: To compare the efficacy of scalp cooling for straight versus curly hair in a pilot trail.Setting: A radiation oncology breast cancel clinic.Methods: This 20-month randomised controlled trial recruited females (18–65 years) to receive chemotherapy (Adriamycin or Epirubicin and Cyclophosphamide followed by Paclitaxel) with or without scalp cooling. Outcomes were percentage alopecia (Severity ALopecia Tool) by hair curvature and treatment retention.Results: Forty eight patients (24 per group) were randomised; four in each group withdrew before first study visit and photographs of three in the cooling group could not be found for assessment. Thus 77% constituted the intention-to-treat population (17 cooling vs. 20 control). Agreement on alopecia severity was good overall (intra-class correlation coefficient [ICC] = 0.94; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.85–0.97) and at six of seven time points. Overall, cooling significantly reduced CIA, relative to no-cooling (58.15 ± 28.46 vs. 37.29 ± 20.52; p = 0.0167); however, percentage alopecia was cosmetically significant. There was no difference in CIA between cooling participants with straight (n = 8) versus curly hair (n = 9), (p = 0.0740).The number of patients completing the various cycles of chemotherapy declined from 77.1% at cycle 1 to 18.8% at cycle 7 for the whole study, and from 100% each to 17.6% and 30.0% for cooling and control groups, respectively (p = 0.451).Conclusion: This study suggests that hair curvature has no significant impact on the efficacy of scalp cooling to reduce CIA, however, this requires confirmation.
 
Publisher AOSIS
 
Contributor The NRF SARChI Chair in Dermatology and Toxicology and the South African Medical Research Council
Date 2021-06-24
 
Type info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion — Randomised controlled trial
Format text/html application/epub+zip text/xml application/pdf
Identifier 10.4102/sajo.v5i0.181
 
Source South African Journal of Oncology; Vol 5 (2021); 7 pages 2523-0646 2518-8704
 
Language eng
 
Relation
The following web links (URLs) may trigger a file download or direct you to an alternative webpage to gain access to a publication file format of the published article:

https://sajo.org.za/index.php/sajo/article/view/181/481 https://sajo.org.za/index.php/sajo/article/view/181/482 https://sajo.org.za/index.php/sajo/article/view/181/483 https://sajo.org.za/index.php/sajo/article/view/181/484
 
Coverage Western Cape May 2017-November 2018 female gender, (ii) aged 18 to 65 years, (iii) had breast cancer surgery: mastectomy or breast conserving methods, with or without lymph node removal,
Rights Copyright (c) 2021 Odirile Obuseng, Nonhlanhla Khumalo, Thurandrie Naiker, Tselane Thebe https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
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