Effect of Arginine- and Glutamine-based Oral Formulations on Salivary Biomarkers and Clinical Severity of Radiation-induced Oral Mucositis in Head and Neck Cancer: A Randomized Controlled Trial

NCT ID: NCT07020754 Phase: PHASE2 Status: COMPLETED Enrollment: 84 Completion: 2026-01-25

Conditions

Radiation Induced Oral Mucositis, Oral Mucositis, Oral Mucositis Due to Radiation

Interventions

L-arginine Oral Suspension, L-glutamine Oral Suspension, Maltodextrin Oral Suspension (Control)

Summary

This triple-blinded, randomized controlled clinical trial investigates the effectiveness of L-arginine and L-glutamine oral suspensions in managing radiation-induced oral mucositis (RIOM) in patients with head and neck cancer (HNC) undergoing radiotherapy. A total of 69 patients are randomly assigned to three groups: L-arginine + maltodextrin, glutamine + maltodextrin, or maltodextrin alone (control).

The interventions are administered as a swish-and-swallow solution three times daily from the second to seventh week of radiotherapy. Key outcomes assessed include oral mucositis severity (WHO scale), pain intensity (VAS), body mass index (BMI), oral health-related quality of life (OHIP-14), and salivary epidermal growth factor (EGF) levels. The study aims to determine whether L-arginine offers superior mucosal healing and symptom relief compared to glutamine or placebo.

Primary Outcome

Change in salivary IL-6 levels during radiotherapy-induced oral mucositis

Source

ClinicalTrials.gov