4.6 Review

A review of movement disorders in chemotherapy-induced neurotoxicity

Journal

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12984-021-00818-2

Keywords

Cancer; Chemotherapy; Neuropathy; CIPN; Sensorimotor dysfunction

Funding

  1. Qatar National Library
  2. National Institutes of Health [R01-CA221363, R01-HD090642, T32-EB009406, F31-NS118832]

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Chemotherapy treatment for cancer can lead to lasting neurotoxic effects, resulting in sensory and motor symptoms that affect day-to-day movement functions in survivors. Current understanding of movement disorders associated with chemotherapy is limited and more quantitative studies are needed. Research indicates that cancer survivors exhibit increased postural sway, conservative gait patterns, and suboptimal hand function compared to healthy individuals.
Chemotherapy agents used in the standard treatments for many types of cancer are neurotoxic and can lead to lasting sensory and motor symptoms that compromise day-to-day movement functions in cancer survivors. To date, the details of movement disorders associated with chemotherapy are known largely through self-reported symptoms and functional limitations. There are few quantitative studies of specific movement deficits, limiting our understanding of dysfunction, as well as effective assessments and interventions. The aim of this narrative review is to consolidate the current understanding of sensorimotor disabilities based on quantitative measures in cancer survivors who received chemotherapy. We performed literature searches on PubMed and found 32 relevant movement studies. We categorized these studies into three themes based on the movement deficits investigated: (1) balance and postural control; (2) gait function; (3) upper limb function. This literature suggests that cancer survivors have increased postural sway, more conservative gait patterns, and suboptimal hand function compared to healthy individuals. More studies are needed that use objective measures of sensorimotor function to better characterize movement disabilities and investigate the underlying causes, as required for developing targeted assessments and interventions. By updating our understanding of movement impairments in this population, we identify significant gaps in knowledge that will help guide the direction of future research.

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