Longitudinal Study of Inflammatory, Behavioral, Clinical and Psychosocial Risk Factors for Chemotherapy-Induced Peripheral Neuropath

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Abstract

Abstract Purpose. Chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy (CIPN) is a common dose-limiting side effect of taxane and platinum chemotherapy for breast cancer. Clinicians cannot accurately predict CIPN severity partly because its pathophysiology is poorly understood. Although inflammation may play a role in CIPN, there are limited human studies. Here, we identified the strongest predictors of CIPN using variables measured before taxane- or platinum-based chemotherapy, including serum inflammatory markers.Methods. 116 sedentary women with breast cancer (mean age 55 years) rated (1) numbness and tingling and (2) hot/coldness in hands/feet on 0-10 scales before and after six weeks of taxane- or platinum-based chemotherapy. A sub-study was added to collect cytokine data in the final 55 patients. We examined all linear models to predict CIPN severity at 6 weeks using pre-chemotherapy assessments of inflammatory, behavioral, clinical, and psychosocial factors. The final model was selected via goodness of fit.Results. The strongest pre-chemotherapy predictors of numbness and tingling were worse fatigue/anxiety/depression (explaining 27% of variance), older age (9%), and baseline neuropathy (5%). The strongest predictors of hot/coldness in hands/feet were worse baseline neuropathy (11%) and fatigue/anxiety/depression (6%). Inflammation was a risk for CIPN, per more pro-inflammatory IL-1β (6%) predicting numbness/tingling and less anti-inflammatory IL-10 predicting numbness and tingling (6%) and hot/coldness in hands/feet (9%).Conclusions. The strongest pre-chemotherapy predictors of CIPN included worse fatigue/anxiety/depression and baseline neuropathy. A pro-inflammatory state also predicted CIPN. Because this is an exploratory study, these results suggest specific outcomes (e.g., IL-1β) and effect size estimates for designing replication and extension studies.Trial Registration. NCT00924651

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europepmc
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License: CC-BY-4.0