A pharmacogenetic predisposition to thalidomide-induced neuropathy has been investigated. Differences of drug metabolism were examined in 16 patients with severe orogenital ulceration, who were treated with thalidomide (< 200 mg/day) for 0.3-5.0 years. Eight had evidence of early peripheral neuropat
Thalidomide-induced peripheral neuropathy
✍ Scribed by C. W. Hess; T. Hunziker; A. Küpfer; H. P. Ludin
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1986
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 600 KB
- Volume
- 233
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0340-5354
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✦ Synopsis
Prospective clinical and electrophysiological follow-up was performed on nine patients under thalidomide treatment in order to detect the very beginning of possible drug-induced peripheral neuropathy. For neurophysiological assessment, nerve conduction measurements of the median, peroneal and sural nerves (7 conduction parameters) and needle EMG examination of the anterior tibial muscle were performed. The results of a first control after about 3 months of treatment were compared with the starting point examination, and the patients were then classified as "affected" or "not affected" according to clinical and neurophysiological criteria. At this point, three patients showed clinical and electrophysiological, and another two only electrophysiological alterations suggesting early neuropathy. This classification did not change after further clinical and electrophysiological controls. Without starting-point values, the early detection of neuropathy would not have been possible in all patients. No single reliable neurophysiological parameter for detection of thalidomide-induced neuropathy could be found. Pharmacogenetic classification with regard to hydroxylation and acetylation phenotypes was then performed in some patients and interpreted with relation to thalidomide neurotoxicity. A possible relationship between slow acetylators and development of thalidomide-induced neuropathy was found.
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