Journal
EUROPEAN NEUROLOGY
Volume 56, Issue 1, Pages 13-16Publisher
KARGER
DOI: 10.1159/000094376
Keywords
oxaliplatin; colorectal cancer; neurotoxicity; neuropathy; quality of life
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Oxaliplatin (L-OHP) has become a standard treatmentfor advanced colorectal cancer and a valid option for patients in the adjuvant setting. Compared with cisplatin, L-OHP has no renal toxicity, only mild hematological and gastrointestinal toxicity, while neurotoxicity is the limiting toxicity. This side effect has been described as a transient distal clysesthesia, enhanced by exposure to cold, and as a dose-related cumulative mild sensitive neuropathy. We studied two groups of patients (18 and 13) with advanced colorectal cancer, treated with median cumulative doses of L-OHP 862 mg/m(2) and 1,033.5 mg/m(2). All the patients had been evaluated previously, during treatment, after discontinuation and after a long follow-up of 5 years to verify the incidence and the characteristics of the neuropathy induced by this antineoplastic agent. The clinical and neurophysiological examinations showed an acute and transient neurotoxicity and a cumulative dose-related sensory neuropathy in nearly all the patients. The reversibility of these effects was studied. Five patients continue to manifest symptoms and signs of neurotoxicity after a long follow-up, indicating persistence of this peculiar type of neuropathy. Copyright (c) 2006 S. Karger AG, Basel.
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