Wednesday 25 May 2022

 

Hair safe study: Effects of scalp cooling on hair preservation and hair regrowth in breast cancer patients receiving chemotherapy - A prospective interventional study

 

by Christine Brunner, Miriam Emmelheinz, Ricarda Kofler, Samira Abdel Azim, Marlene Lehmann, Verena Wieser, Magdalena Ritter, Christian Marth, Daniel Egle 

 

The Breast: VOLUME 64, P50-55, AUGUST 01, 2022 (Published: April 29, 2022)

 

Breast cancer is the most common cancer in women worldwide. When detected early, the chance of long-term survival can be as high as 90% due to massive improvements in therapeutic options over the past decades.

A substantial proportion of patients with breast cancer still receive chemotherapy as part of their treatment, which, however, has detrimental side effects.

Among the most common toxicities are nausea, emesis, premature menopause and hair loss.

Although chemotherapy-induced alopecia is not a life-threatening side effect, it ranks amongst the most troublesome side effects concerning the patients’ quality of life and body image.

Due to the high chance of a cure by improved systemic therapy, quality of life (QoL) is becoming an increasingly important aspect. Chemotherapy-induced alopecia also affects psychological well-being and has been associated with depression.

Currently, the most promising method to prevent chemotherapy-induced alopecia is scalp cooling (SC). To date, various studies have reported its efficacy in small patient populations

SC leads to vasoconstriction, which inhibits cellular drug uptake, furthermore, hypothermia reduces the metabolic rate of hair follicles, finally lowering susceptibility to chemotherapy damage. Concerns that SC might increase scalp metastases have limited its clinical use in the past. However, a recent meta-analysis by Rugo et al. showed no association of scalp metastases with SC.

Initial studies on SC were conducted primarily with taxane- and only rarely anthracycline-based chemotherapy.

A high efficacy of SC was previously demonstrated for chemotherapy containing taxanes only; however, this does not reflect clinical reality considering that most chemotherapy regimens contain two or more cytostatic agents.

This prospective study aims to evaluate the efficacy of SC in different chemotherapy regimens and hair recovery in the follow-up period.