# A phase II randomized controlled trial of orally administered yeast-derived β-glucan for alleviating chemoradiotherapy-induced oral mucositis in nasopharyngeal carcinoma patients

**Authors:** Xiwei Xu, Fang Li, Fanglin Xie, Feixia Zhuo, Xiaomin Xie, Qingfeng Yang, Renwei Jiang, Jinman Chen, Siyang Wang, Yuanling Luo, Lingling Yu, Zongping Han

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2026.1775554 · Frontiers in Oncology · 2026-03-09

## TL;DR

This study found that oral yeast-derived β-glucan reduces severe mouth sores and improves nutrition in cancer patients undergoing chemoradiotherapy.

## Contribution

The study demonstrates that oral β-glucan supplementation reduces mucositis severity and nutritional decline in nasopharyngeal carcinoma patients.

## Key findings

- 70% of PGG-treated patients had mild mucositis (grade 0-I) compared to 36.7% in controls.
- PGG reduced grade III mucositis incidence to 6.67% versus 26.67% in controls.
- PGG improved nutritional outcomes with lower PG-SGA scores and increased body fat.

## Abstract

Patients with locoregionally advanced nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) undergoing chemoradiotherapy frequently experience severe oral mucositis, with incidence rates ranging from 78.6%-88%. This adverse effect often disrupts therapeutic adherence and negatively impacts nutritional intake. This Phase II trial evaluated oral yeast-derived β-glucan (PGG) for alleviating mucositis and improving nutrition in NPC patients.

Sixty-three stage III-IVa NPC patients receiving radical radiotherapy (70 Gy/33F) with concurrent cisplatin were randomized to PGG supplementation (Experimental group, 5 g/10kg/day, n=30) plus routine care or routine care alone (Control group, n=30). Mucositis severity (RTOG criteria), nutritional parameters (PG-SGA, body composition), and hematological indices were assessed weekly.

The experimental Group showed significantly reduced mucositis severity: 70% achieved grade 0-I (vs. 36.7% controls; U = 266.000, p=0.004), with grade III incidence at 6.67% (vs. 26.67%). Nutritional outcomes improved in the experimental Group, evidenced by lower PG-SGA scores at week 4 (10.93 ± 2.60 vs. 12.37 ± 2.39, p=0.03), attenuated weight loss during weeks 3-4 (p<0.05), and increased body fat percentage (p<0.05). No intergroup differences occurred in pain scores, muscle mass, or hematological parameters (leukocytes, hemoglobin, platelets, lymphocyte subsets).

Oral PGG significantly reduces severe mucositis incidence and mitigates nutritional deterioration during NPC chemoradiotherapy without added toxicity.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** cisplatin (PubChem CID 5460033)
- **Diseases:** nasopharyngeal carcinoma (MONDO:0015459), oral mucositis (MONDO:0004842)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** NPC (MESH:D000077274), pain (MESH:D010146), toxicity (MESH:D064420), oral mucositis (MESH:D013280), muscle mass (MESH:C536030), weight loss (MESH:D015431), Mucositis (MESH:D052016), stage III-IVa (MESH:C536467)
- **Chemicals:** cisplatin (MESH:D002945), PGG (MESH:D011462), beta-glucan (MESH:D047071)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606], Saccharomyces cerevisiae (baker's yeast, species) [taxon 4932]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

31 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13006314/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13006314