| Literature DB >> 20731872 |
Andrew Hill1, Peter Bergin, Fritha Hanning, Paul Thompson, Michael Findlay, Dragan Damianovich, Mark J McKeage.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Platinum-based drugs, such as cisplatin and oxaliplatin, are well-known for inducing chronic sensory neuropathies but their acute and motor neurotoxicities are less well characterised. Use was made of nerve conduction studies and needle electromyography (EMG) to assess motor nerve excitability in cancer patients during their first treatment cycle with platinum-based chemotherapy in this study.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20731872 PMCID: PMC2936328 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2407-10-451
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Patient Characteristics
| Number of Patients | ||
|---|---|---|
| Median | 62 years | |
| Range | 28 to 79 years | |
| Male | 22 | |
| Female | 7 | |
| Colorectal Dukes C | 13 | |
| Colorectal Metastatic | 10 | |
| Head and Neck | 4 | |
| Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer | 2 | |
| None | 18 | |
| One or more1 | 11 | |
| None | 22 | |
| One or more regimens2 | 7 | |
| Oxaliplatin (130 mg/m2) with Capecitabine (1000 to 2000 mg BID po days 1 to 14) | 23 | |
| Cisplatin (100 mg/m2) | 4 | |
| Carboplatin (AUC 6 mg*min/ml) with Paclitaxel (200 mg/m2) | 2 | |
1hypertension (6 patients), hypercholesterolaemia (3 patients), goitre, rheumatoid arthritis, gout, benign prostatic hypertrophy, impaired glucose tolerance, ischaemic heart disease, polycythaemia rubra vera; renal stones, duodenal ulcer (1 patient each). 2 5-fluorouracil plus folinic acid (4 patients), single agent capecitabine (3 patients), capecitabine plus irinotecan (2 patients).
Figure 1Spontaneous high frequency motor fibre action potentials. (A) Normal EMG at baseline; (B) EMG showing spontaneous high frequency motor fibre action potentials 46 hrs after oxaliplatin; (C) Proportion of patients and muscles affected by spontaneous high frequency motor fibre action potentials by time relative to chemotherapy.
Comparison of neurophysiological endpoints of acute oxaliplatin-induced motor nerve hyperexcitability
| Number of Abnormal Tests/Total Number of Tests (%) | Spontaneous High Frequency Motor Unit Action Potentials | Repetitive Compound Motor Action Potentials | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Patients | 0/8 (0%) | 1/8 (13%) | |
| Muscles or Nerves | 0/32 (0%) | 1/32 (3.2%) | |
| Patients | 6/6 (100%) | 5/7 (71%) | |
| Muscles or Nerves | 16/22 (72%) | 9/28 (32%) | |
| Patients | 2/8 (25%) | 2/8 (25%) | |
| Muscles or Nerves | 4/32 (12%) | 3/31 (10%) | |
| Patients | 0/6 (0%) | 1/6 (17%) | |
| Muscles or Nerves | 0/24 (0%) | 2/24 (8%) | |
| Patients | 100% | 71% | |
| Muscles or Nerves | 72% | 32% | |
| Patients | 100% | 86% | |
| Muscles or Nerves | 100% | 95% | |
*For detecting oxaliplatin-induced motor nerve hyperexcitability on days 2 to 4 post-treatment
Figure 2Repetitive compound motor action potentials (CMAPs). (A) Normal CMAPs at baseline; (B) Repetitive CMAPs 46 hrs after oxaliplatin; (C) Proportion of patients and nerves affected by repetitive CMAPs by time relative to chemotherapy.