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The purpose of this prospective observational study is to understand the relationship between paclitaxel exposure and development of peripheral neuropathy during treatment.
Full description
Paclitaxel is a chemotherapeutic agent commonly used in various tumor types. Paclitaxel efficacy and toxicity are "dose-dependent" meaning that increasing the dose increases treatment efficacy and occurrence of toxicity. When used in the weekly 1-hour infusion regimen paclitaxel is commonly associated with treatment-limiting sensory peripheral neuropathy. At the current standard dose of 80 mg/m2 approximately 20-25% of patients experience treatment-limiting neuropathy.
Drug exposure, not dose, determines treatment efficacy and neuropathy development. When treated with standard doses there is substantial variability in drug exposure meaning some patients are receiving less efficacious treatment than optimal. At this time we do not monitor a patient's exposure because the optimal exposure level has not been defined. The purpose of this study is to prospectively enroll patients for systematic collection of exposure and neuropathy data in order to characterize this relationship. Once the relationship between cumulative exposure and neuropathy has been characterized, this model will be used to define an exposure target in future prospective exposure-guided dose-adjustment trials.
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Inclusion criteria
Diagnosis of invasive breast cancer
Systemic treatment with paclitaxel for curative intent (neoadjuvant, adjuvant, or oligometastatic disease per PI discretion)
80 mg/m2 1-hour infusions weekly for up to 12 weeks
Female sex
->18 years old
Ability to understand and the willingness to sign a written informed consent.
Exclusion criteria
60 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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