Radiation‐induced rhinosinusitis: Mechanism research and clinical progress review

Chunge Zheng, Longgang Yu, Yan Jiang
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Abstract

Radiation‐induced rhinosinusitis is a vital dose‐limiting reaction in patients with head and neck malignancy. Unlike oral mucositis during or after radiotherapy, radiation‐induced sinusitis is easily overlooked in clinical practice and rarely included in experimental studies. Herein, we review the literature to date on radiation‐induced rhinosinusitis.Relevant studies published between 1995 and 2022 were determined through a detailed search using open keywords from PubMed, with manual search of the reference list of the identified articles. Keywords searched were “ionizing radiation,” “radiotherapy,” “intensity‐modulated radiotherapy,” “head and neck tumor,” “nasopharyngeal carcinoma,” “nasal epithelium,” “radiation damage,” and “radiation‐induced rhinosinusitis.” Full‐text articles that clearly stated the pathogenesis, clinical manifestation, predictors, treatment, and prognosis of radiation‐induced rhinosinusitis were included.Radiation‐induced rhinosinusitis occurs during radiotherapy and can last for months or even years after radiotherapy. A mixture of cellular outcomes caused by ionizing radiation and persistent damage of the epithelial and submucosal tissues after the treatment result from the radiotherapy itself. Endoscopic sinus surgery improves symptoms but can be accompanied by intraoperative and postoperative complications. Nasal irrigation, steroids, and antibiotics appear to reduce inflammation and relieve symptoms to a certain extent. Studies on other potentially useful drugs are underway and in the exploration stage, without clinical application.Despite its high incidence, radiation‐induced rhinosinusitis is a type of dose‐limiting toxicity that theoretically does not produce fatal effects at controlled doses and with adequate follow‐up care. In moderate‐to‐severe cases, toxicity may be present. Currently, radiation‐induced rhinosinusitis has potential prevention and treatment strategies. However, no unified management protocol has shown significant improvement in radiation‐induced rhinosinusitis. Further research is necessary.
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辐射诱发的鼻窦炎:机制研究及临床进展综述
辐射诱发的鼻窦炎是头颈部恶性肿瘤患者的重要剂量限制反应。与放疗期间或放疗后的口腔黏膜炎不同,辐射诱发的鼻窦炎在临床实践中很容易被忽视,很少被纳入实验研究。在此,我们回顾了迄今为止关于辐射诱发的鼻窦炎的文献。1995年至2022年间发表的相关研究通过使用PubMed开放关键词进行详细搜索确定,并手动搜索已确定文章的参考文献列表。搜索的关键词是“电离辐射”、“放疗”、“强度调制放疗”、“头颈部肿瘤”、“鼻咽癌”、“鼻上皮”、“辐射损伤”和“辐射诱发的鼻窦炎”。本文收录了明确阐述放射性鼻窦炎发病机制、临床表现、预测因素、治疗和预后的全文文章。放射诱发的鼻窦炎可在放射治疗期间发生,并可在放射治疗后持续数月甚至数年。由电离辐射引起的混合细胞结果和放射治疗本身引起的治疗后上皮和粘膜下组织的持续损伤。内窥镜鼻窦手术可改善症状,但可能伴有术中和术后并发症。鼻腔冲洗、类固醇和抗生素似乎能在一定程度上减轻炎症和缓解症状。其他可能有用的药物的研究正在进行中,处于探索阶段,没有临床应用。尽管发病率很高,但辐射引起的鼻窦炎是一种剂量限制性毒性,理论上在控制剂量和适当的随访护理下不会产生致命影响。在中度至重度病例中,可能存在毒性。目前,辐射引起的鼻窦炎有潜在的预防和治疗策略。然而,没有统一的管理方案显示放射性鼻窦炎有显著改善。进一步的研究是必要的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
4.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
283
审稿时长
13 weeks
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