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Vinca alkaloids, thalidomide and eribulinā€induced peripheral neurotoxicity: From pathogenesis to treatment

Authors :
Maryam B. Lustberg
Andreas A. Argyriou
Badrul Islam
Nathan P. Staff
Noah Kolb
Paola Alberti
Islam, B
Lustberg, M
Staff, N
Kolb, N
Alberti, P
Argyriou, A
Source :
Journal of the Peripheral Nervous System. 24
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Wiley, 2019.

Abstract

Vinca alkaloids, thalidomide, and eribulin are widely used to treat patients with childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), adults affected by multiple myeloma and locally invasive or metastatic breast cancer, respectively. However, soon after their introduction into clinical practice, chemotherapy-induced peripheral neurotoxicity (CIPN) emerged as their main non-hematological and among dose-limiting adverse events. It is generally perceived that vinca alkaloids and the antiangiogenic agent thalidomide are more neurotoxic, compared to eribulin. The exposure to these chemotherapeutic agents is associated with an axonal, length-dependent, sensory polyneuropathy of mild to moderate severity, whereas it is considered that the peripheral nerve damage, unless severe, usually resolves soon after treatment discontinuation. Advanced age, high initial and prolonged dosing, coadministration of other neurotoxic chemotherapeutic agents and pre-existing neuropathy are the common risk factors. Pharmacogenetic biomarkers might be used to define patients at increased susceptibility of CIPN. Currently, there is no established therapy for CIPN prevention or treatment; symptomatic treatment for neuropathic pain and dose reduction or withdrawal in severe cases is considered, at the cost of reduced cancer therapeutic efficacy. This review critically examines the pathogenesis, epidemiology, risk factors (both clinical and pharmacogenetic), clinical phenotype and management of CIPN as a result of exposure to vinca alkaloids, thalidomide and its analogue lenalidomide as also eribulin.

Details

ISSN :
15298027 and 10859489
Volume :
24
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of the Peripheral Nervous System
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....aefb4753b162aad669588e7a0513cdce
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/jns.12334