Background
Oral mucositis (OM) is a common toxicity of stem cell transplantation (SCT). We sought to evaluate OM burden, risk factors, and implications in a cohort of allogeneic‐SCT recipients.
Methods
This was a single‐center study including 115 adult allogeneic‐SCT transplanted between 2016 and 2018 for various hematological conditions. Conditioning intensity was categorized as myeloablative (MAC, 39%), reduced intensity (34%), or reduced toxicity (RTC, 27%) in patients conditioned with fludarabine‐treosulfan. OM was prospectively graded using the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (v.4.0) system.
Results
Moderate‐to‐severe OM (grade 2‐4) was experienced by 60% of patients. In a univariate analysis, younger age (P = .023), lower body mass index (P = .01), recent smoking (P = .08), recent antibiotics exposure (P = .018), MAC (P < .001), and methotrexate (P = .009) were associated with moderate‐to‐severe OM. In a multivariable logistic regression model, conditioning and graft‐versus‐host disease prophylaxis remained significant. OM risk was lowest with RTC (RTC vs MAC: odd ratio [OR] 0.05, P < .001), and recent antibiotic exposure trended toward increased risk (OR 1.88, P = .168). OM was associated with longer hospitalization, delayed neutrophil engraftment, and gastrointestinal‐related infections.
Conclusion
Oral mucositis remains a leading SCT complication. Treosulfan‐based conditioning has low mucosal toxicity and is appealing given previous reports on its high efficacy.