Abstract
BackgroundAlthough acute oxaliplatin-induced neuropathy (OXIPN) is frequently regarded to be transient, recent studies have reported prolongation of infusion times, dose reduction and treatment cessation following the first dose of oxaliplatin in quarter of patients. Acute OXIPN is also a well-established risk factor for chronic neuropathy. However, there is underreporting of these parameters during the acute phase (≤ 14 days). This paper systematically reviews the incidence of acute OXIPN and its impact on treatment in the first cycle.MethodsA systematic literature search was performed using PubMed and Medline. Published original articles were included if they described details about prevalence of oxaliplatin-induced acute neuropathy.ResultsFourteen studies, comprised of 6211 patients were evaluated. The majority of patients were treated with oxaliplatin in combination with leucovorin and fluorouracil (FOLFOX). Most studies used the National Cancer Institute Common Toxicity Criteria to assess acute neuropathy. Acute neuropathy (Grades 1–4) was the most common event with prevalence ranging from 4–98%, followed by haematological (1.4–81%) and gastrointestinal (1.2–67%) toxicities, respectively. Drug regimens, starting dose of oxaliplatin and neuropathy assessment tools varied across studies. In addition, moderate to severe toxicities were common in patients that received a large dose of oxaliplatin (> 85 mg/m2) and/ or combined drugs. The majority of studies did not report the factors affecting acute neuropathy namely the range (minimal) doses required to evoke acute neuropathy, patient and clinical risk factors. In addition, there was no systematic reporting of the number of patients subjected to prolonged infusion, dose reduction, treatment delay and treatment cessation during the acute phase.ConclusionDespite the heterogeneity of studies regarding oxaliplatin starting dose, drug regimen, neuropathy assessment tools and study design, a large number of patients developed acute neuropathy. To develop a better preventive and therapeutic guideline for acute/chronic neuropathy, a prospective study should be conducted in a large cohort of patients in relation to drug regimen, starting/ranges (minimal) of doses producing acute neuropathy, treatment compliance, patient and clinical risk factors using a standardised neuropathy assessment tool.
Highlights
Acute oxaliplatin-induced neuropathy (OXIPN) is frequently regarded to be transient, recent studies have reported prolongation of infusion times, dose reduction and treatment cessation following the first dose of oxaliplatin in quarter of patients
The current review focuses on the prevalence of acute oxaliplatin- induced neuropathy within the first treatment cycle
Oxaliplatin was administered in combination with fluorouracil (5-FU) and leucovorin/folinic acid (LV/FA) as Folinic Acid (FOLFOX) regimen [8, 14, 15, 17, 29, 32, 33, 36, 38]
Summary
Acute oxaliplatin-induced neuropathy (OXIPN) is frequently regarded to be transient, recent studies have reported prolongation of infusion times, dose reduction and treatment cessation following the first dose of oxaliplatin in quarter of patients. Surgery alone results in a low 5 year disease-free survival rate [4] with half of the patients either having metastases at the time of presentation, or developing them during the course of disease [1, 5]. In this context oxaliplatin, a third generation platinum compound has remained the backbone in the treatment of colorectal cancer both in the adjuvant and in metastatic settings [6,7,8]. As a single agent oxaliplatin has a 5 year disease free survival rate of 10% to 20% [9,10,11], when combined with fluorouracil and leucovorin (FOLFOX), a progression-disease free state was observed in 58% of patients [12,13,14,15] and a 5 year disease free survival rate of 78% [7]
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