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A significant proportion (up to 60%) of myeloma patients treated with Bortezomib or thalidomide or both develop significant peripheral neuropathy (PN). Standard of care for this complication include drugs like gabapentin or pregabalin, which relieve symptoms only partially. PN of grade II or above mandates reduction in dose or frequency of Bortezomib or thalidomide, which may compromise treatment outcome. This clinical study explores whether, by intervening early in its course using acupuncture, progression of PN can be reversed, stabilized or retarded thereby allowing continuation of treatment on schedule.
Full description
In addition, a full nerve conduction test will be done at beginning of acupuncture and at the end of 10 sessions of acupuncture.
4.2 Subjective assessment A quality of life questionnaire (FACT/GOG-NTX v4) will be filled in by patients at enrolment, commencement, at the 6th session and at the end of 10 sessions of acupuncture.
4.3 Scoring With both objective and subjective assessment, a Total Neuropathy Score can be calculated at each time point as a quantitative measurement of the severity of PN
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Age > 21 years and have a diagnosis of a plasma cell dyscrasia or lymphoma.
Patients must have neuropathy greater or equal to 2 according to CTCAE v 3.0 scale in spite of adequate duration (at least 3 weeks) of previous treatment with Gabapentin or Pregabalin or are unable to tolerate these drugs. Patients receiving any of these drugs must remain on the same medications throughout the study period; however, minor adjustments in dosage are allowed.
The patient's current or previous treatment must include bortezomib or thalidomide
ECOG Performance Status of 0, 1, or 2
Exclusion criteria
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8 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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