The Mail on Sunday

Saved… the jaws that are wrecked by radiothera­py

- By Ethan Ennals

PEOPLE with debilitati­ng jaw fractures caused by cancer treatment could be spared risky surgery by a breakthrou­gh drug combo that heals damaged bone. Radiothera­py to the head and neck, given for tongue, throat and nose cancers, can lead to problems with blood vessels connected to the lower jaw. This can trigger infections in the bone and, in extreme cases, jaw fractures.

Known a so steo radio necrosis, the condition can affect one in ten patients who undergo radiothera­py for head and neck cancers, impacting up to 1,000 Britons every year.

Until recently, surgery has been the only remedy. This can include partial removal of the jaw or rebuilding it using bone from a leg – an intensive procedure, particular­ly for patients already coping with cancer treatment, and one that does not work in many cases.

Now, a landmark study has found that giving patients two commonly used drugs, pentoxifyl­line and tocopherol, not only halts bone deteriorat­ion but for more than half of patients reverses it.

Dr Vinod Patel, a consultant oral surgeon at Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust, led the study and said he hoped the findings would motivate other cancer specialist­s to take on the treatment. He added: ‘We’ve seen broken jaw bones that have healed with no surgical input.’

Head and neck cancers affect more than 12,000 Britons a year. Most are successful­ly treated with radiothera­py and chemothera­py. Those struck byosteo radio necrosis often first notice something is wrong when bits of bone begin to protrude in the mouth as the gum recedes due to lack of blood supply. The uncovered bone can then become infected. Professor Mark McGurk, oral surgeon at University College London Hospital, said: ‘The quality of life for those with this condition is terrible.’

Doctors often prescribe antibiotic­s to treat the infections, but this cannot stop the bone deteriorat­ion. Surgery is offered, but in one case in five it fails to halt the damage.

Drugs pentoxifyl­line and tocopherol are both proven to boost blood flow. Prof McGurk said: ‘ This condition is caused by a loss of blood to the bone, so by improving blood supply to the area we are giving the bone the tools it needs to repair itself.’

In December 2020, Dr Patel published the largest study yet into the use of Pen to cl of orosteo radionecro­sis. The study of more than 100 patients on the drug found that in over 80 per cent of them, bone deteriorat­ion was halted. Stunningly, for 56 per cent the damage was reversed, as a renewed supply of blood allowed the bone to heal and regain structure. In some cases, jaw bones that had completely broken off were restored.

One patient to benefit is Alex Cosgrove, 46, from Kent. Diagnosed with stage three throat cancer in 2016 after finding a lump on her left lymph node, she was put on a sixweek course of radiothera­py and chemothera­py, which was effective at fighting the cancer, but was a ‘nasty ordeal’ for the mother-of-two. She said: ‘I suffered severe radiation burns in my throat. I couldn’t eat solids for months and was on incredibly strong painkiller­s.’

Months after her cancer treatment, Alex – a trading standards officer – noticed shards of bone sticking out of her gums. ‘The doctors shaved off the bits of bone but they kept popping up. Then I started to get horrible infections. My face was constantly sore and I struggled to eat or even just function.’

SHE was referred to Guy’s and St Thomas’ and started on the drug combo in March 2018. For the past two years she has seen steady improvemen­t .‘ The infections started happening less and less frequently, and scans of my face showed the bone was healing,’ she says. ‘The last time I had an infection was in 2019, and I’m back to eating all my favourite foods now, like chocolate, which I couldn’t eat for a long time.’

Alex added: ‘ When I was first diagnosed I was told the bone damage was going to slowly eat away at my face. So to know it’s now healing has changed my life.’

Dr Patel is setting up a larger clinical trial and hopes the results will convince NHS regulators to make the treatment part of the standard care for those suffering from osteo radio necrosis. He added: ‘ We’re even exploring whether patients can take it once they come off radiothera­py to pre-empt the disease before it even starts.’

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