Chair of Pain Medicine, Division of Population Health and Genomics, Ninewells Hospital and Medical School, University of Dundee, Dundee, Scotland.
Pain. 2019 May;160 Suppl 1(Suppl 1):S1-S10. doi: 10.1097/j.pain.0000000000001540.
Chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy (CIPN) is a major challenge, with increasing impact as oncological treatments, using potentially neurotoxic chemotherapy, improve cancer cure and survival. Acute CIPN occurs during chemotherapy, sometimes requiring dose reduction or cessation, impacting on survival. Around 30% of patients will still have CIPN a year, or more, after finishing chemotherapy. Accurate assessment is essential to improve knowledge around prevalence and incidence of CIPN. Consensus is needed to standardize assessment and diagnosis, with use of well-validated tools, such as the EORTC-CIPN 20. Detailed phenotyping of the clinical syndrome moves toward a precision medicine approach, to individualize treatment. Understanding significant risk factors and pre-existing vulnerability may be used to improve strategies for CIPN prevention, or to use targeted treatment for established CIPN. No preventive therapies have shown significant clinical efficacy, although there are promising novel agents such as histone deacetylase 6 (HDAC6) inhibitors, currently in early phase clinical trials for cancer treatment. Drug repurposing, eg, metformin, may offer an alternative therapeutic avenue. Established treatment for painful CIPN is limited. Following recommendations for general neuropathic pain is logical, but evidence for agents such as gabapentinoids and amitriptyline is weak. The only agent currently recommended by the American Society of Clinical Oncology is duloxetine. Mechanisms are complex with changes in ion channels (sodium, potassium, and calcium), transient receptor potential channels, mitochondrial dysfunction, and immune cell interactions. Improved understanding is essential to advance CIPN management. On a positive note, there are many potential sites for modulation, with novel analgesic approaches.
化疗引起的周围神经病(CIPN)是一个主要挑战,随着使用潜在神经毒性化疗的肿瘤治疗方法提高癌症治愈率和生存率,其影响也越来越大。急性 CIPN 发生在化疗期间,有时需要减少剂量或停止化疗,从而影响生存。大约 30%的患者在完成化疗 1 年后仍会有 CIPN,甚至更久。准确评估对于提高 CIPN 发病率和患病率的认识至关重要。需要达成共识,以使用经过充分验证的工具(如 EORTC-CIPN 20)来标准化评估和诊断。对临床综合征的详细表型分析朝着精准医学方法迈进,以实现个体化治疗。了解重要的危险因素和固有脆弱性,可能有助于改善 CIPN 的预防策略,或针对已确诊的 CIPN 进行靶向治疗。尽管有一些有前途的新型药物,如组蛋白去乙酰化酶 6(HDAC6)抑制剂,目前正在进行癌症治疗的早期临床试验,但没有一种预防疗法显示出显著的临床疗效。药物再利用,例如二甲双胍,可能提供另一种治疗途径。对于有疼痛症状的 CIPN 的既定治疗方法有限。遵循一般神经病理性疼痛的建议是合理的,但加巴喷丁类药物和阿米替林等药物的证据较弱。美国临床肿瘤学会目前唯一推荐的药物是度洛西汀。机制复杂,涉及离子通道(钠、钾和钙)、瞬时受体电位通道、线粒体功能障碍和免疫细胞相互作用的变化。为了推进 CIPN 管理,必须深入了解这些机制。值得欣慰的是,有许多潜在的调节部位,有新的镇痛方法。