Electric hand warmer versus observation to avoid discomfort during scalp cooling for chemotherapy-induced alopecia prevention: a randomized study

Author:

Landeiro Luciana Castro GarciaORCID,Lopes Paim Miranda Diego,Mathias Machado Roberto,Dienstmann Rodrigo,Costa e Silva Matheus,da Silva Ceci Figuerêdo,de Castro Adriana Lisbôa Ramalho,dos Santos Ana Paula Teixeira,Bomfim Victor Hugo Valença,Teixeira Machado Bruno,Viviane Carvalho Rodrigues Gonçalve Michele,Freitas Muniz Teixeira Andréa,Jamile Santiago Costa Maira,de Oliveira Dantas Viana Priscila,Almeida Pâmela,de Cerqueira Mathias Clarissa Maria

Abstract

AbstractChemotherapy-induced alopecia (CIA) is a challenge in the management of cancer patients. Scalp cooling (SC) leads to reduction in CIA, however it is associated with significant adverse events, leading to 3–13% discontinuation rates. This pilot study evaluated the role of Electric Hand Warmers (EHW) on thermal (TC), sensorial (SCo) and general comfort (GC) in patients with breast cancer (BC) undergoing chemotherapy and SC to reduce CIA. Patients were randomly assigned to EHW use or observation. TC, SCo and GC were evaluated after each chemotherapy infusion. Favorable outcomes in both TC and SCo defined a positive result on GC. We analysed the impact of age, alopecia, chemotherapy regimen and EHW use in the different comfort scales using a Logistic Regression (LR) model. Forty women with early breast cancer were randomly assigned to EHW (n = 20) or observation (n = 20) during neo(adjuvant) chemotherapy. Median age was 53 years. In the EHW arm, favorable thermal response was reported by 79% versus 50% in the control arm (odds ratio [OR] 3.79, p < 0.001). SCo was satisfactory in 82% in the EHW arm versus 74% in the control arm (OR 1.62, p = 0.1). Overall, 73% in the EHW arm had favorable GC versus 44% in the control arm (OR 3.4, p < 0.001). Age, alopecia, and chemotherapy regimen did not impact on comfort measures. Conclusion: Our study suggests that the use of an EHW has a consistent favorable impact on TC and GC of BC patients under SC technology to prevent CIA.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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