Objective: To assess the incidence and magnitude of ototoxicity in patients undergoing an experimental targeted chemoradiation protocol incorporating extremely high-dose intra-arterial cisplatin therapy with systemic sodium thiosulfate neutralization for the treatment of advanced carcinomas of the head and neck.
Design: Inception cohort study.
Setting: University-based, tertiary care referral center for advanced head and neck malignant disease.
Patients: The first 70 patients with advanced carcinomas of the head and neck consecutively entered in the protocol.
Intervention: Patients received up to 4 weekly courses of intra-arterial cisplatin (150 mg/m2 per infusion), together with systemic sodium thiosulfate and external beam radiation (68-70 Gy). Audiometric analysis was performed before the initiation of therapy, and subsequent to the second and fourth cisplatin infusions.
Main outcome measures: Audiometric thresholds. Ototoxicity was defined as an increase in pure-tone threshold of 15 dB at 1 frequency or 10 dB at 3 frequencies, between 250 and 4000 Hz.
Results: The incidence of ototoxicity was 25% at 150 mg/m2, 50% at 300 mg/m2, 64% at 450 mg/m2, and 60% at 600 mg/m2. Hearing at frequencies of 2000 Hz or less was minimally or not affected. Previous hearing loss did not appear to affect the incidence of ototoxicity. A plateau of hearing loss at 60-dB hearing level, as noted by other authors, was not observed. There were no cases of debilitating tinnitus or of vestibular loss.
Conclusions: Ototoxicity did occur but was largely confirmed to the higher frequencies. Hearing losses resulting from this chemoradiation protocol were not sufficiently severe to alter its application.