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STUDY PURPOSE: To evaluate status of research on pharmacologic interventions for CIPN
TYPE OF STUDY: Meta-analysis and systematic review
DATABASES USED: Medline, Embase, and China National Knowledge Internet
YEARS INCLUDED: (Overall for all databases) Information for dates of search not provided, articles included were from 1995 to 2014
INCLUSION CRITERIA: The study (a) assessed CIPN in patients with cancer, (b) compared two or more drugs or placebo, (c) provided sufficient data to assess differences, and (c) assessed incidence or severity of CIPN
EXCLUSION CRITERIA: None listed
TOTAL REFERENCES RETRIEVED: 1,839
EVALUATION METHOD AND COMMENTS ON LITERATURE USED: No description of quality evaluation
FINAL NUMBER STUDIES INCLUDED: 23
TOTAL PATIENTS INCLUDED IN REVIEW: 2,298
SAMPLE RANGE ACROSS STUDIES: 20-732
KEY SAMPLE CHARACTERISTICS: All but one of the studies focused on patients getting platinum-based chemotherapy and 12 of 23 only included people with colorectal cancer.
PHASE OF CARE: Active antitumor treatment
Contrary to the title, this article does not include any commonly prescribed prescription drugs, including gabapentin, pregabalin, or duloxetine. This review included studies of amifostine, Vitamin E, calcium and magnesium infusions, and glutathione. Eighteen studies had a placebo control group and had no control group. Neither blinding nor control were needed for inclusion. Findings indicate that Vitamin E and amifostine reduce incidence of CIPN, while glutathione and amifostine reduced severity of CIPN. There was one study (n = 20) included that had patients getting amifostine who all had cervical cancer and were receiving cisplatin with radiation therapy. The authors of this original study (Gallardo et al., 1999) found no statistically significant difference in neurotoxicity between those getting amifostine and those who did not. It is therefore unclear how the authors of the meta-analysis found otherwise. There was also only a single study of glutathione versus placebo versus calcium/magnesium (n = 93, 33 of whom received glutathione) included. The original study (Dong et al., 2010) showed no significant differences in CIPN incidence or severity between the three groups. Four studies of Vitamin E, two which were placebo controlled and two with no control group.
The limitations, including lack of quality control, small sample sizes, focus on platinum use, and GI malignancies, limit the generalizability of the findings from this meta-analysis.
Findings from this study suggest that amifostine, glutathione, and Vitamin E may be helpful for CIPN but no recommendations for practice can be made at this time due to limitations of this meta-analysis.