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Acupuncture on Chemotherapy-induced Peripheral Neuropathy

C

China Medical University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Breast Cancer
Chemotherapy-induced Peripheral Neuropathy
Acupuncture
Randomized Controlled Trial

Treatments

Other: acupuncture

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03626220
CMUH106-REC2-117

Details and patient eligibility

About

Peripheral neuropathy is currently the second most common side effect after chemotherapy, second only to the side effects of blood toxicity. A variety of chemotherapy drugs may induce peripheral neurotoxicity and cause by the cumulative dose of chemotherapy drugs. Symptoms include sensory paresthesia, feeling dullness or numbness, glove-like feeling distributed in the palm. The currently most effective way is to interrupt the treatment or adjust the dose of chemotherapeutic drugs, but it is easy to make patients discontinue chemotherapy. The purpose of this study is to explore the impact of acupuncture on neurological symptoms and quality of life. Three kinds of questionnaires will be used:(1) Brief pain inventory- short form to assess the extent of pain, and the impact of daily life. (2) the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy/ Gynecologic Oncology Group- Neurotoxicity(FACT/GOG-NTX)-13 (Version 4) to assess changes in neurological symptoms; (3) World Health Organization Quality of Life Scale-(WHOQOL-BREF) to assess changes in the quality of life of patients. The course of treatment was evaluated for nine weeks. Changes in neurological function and quality of life will be evaluated before treatment, the third week of treatment, the sixth week of treatment, till the ninth week. The aim of this study is to confirm that acupuncture can improve peripheral neuropathy after chemotherapy, in order to enhance breast cancer patients' quality of life, and provide the new opportunity for integrative therapy between Chinese and Western medicine.

Keywords:acupuncture , chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy

Full description

(I) Background of the research A variety of neurotoxic chemotherapeutic agents, including platinums (e.g. cisplatin, carboplatin, and oxaliplatin), taxanes (e.g. paclitaxel and docetaxel), and vinca alkaloids (e.g. vincristine and vinblastine), thalidomide and bortezomib, may induce peripheral neuropathy. Generally speaking, sensory nerve dysfunction is more common than motor involvement. It causes hands and feet to feel tingling, dullness or numbness symmetrically, which will be a glove-like ("glove-and-stocking type") sensation distributed in palms and soles. Patient's touch, vibration, and proprioception senses may be impaired under clinical examinations.

chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy(CIPN) relates to the cumulative doses of chemotherapeutic agents. Sometimes, when chemotherapy is stopped, neuropathy symptoms may continue or worsen, which is called a "costing phenomenon". Nerve damaging usually starts from ends of the extremities, while individual doses were accumulated, it gradually extends to proximal joints or ganglions. CIPN is currently the second most common side, next to hematotoxicity. Within thirty days after chemotherapy, 68.1% of patients may develop CIPN, most of which can be relieved or improved, but there are still 30-83% symptoms persist over 6 months.

At present, the most effective way to treat CIPN is to stop the treatment protocol or adjust doses of chemotherapy; however, it affects the effect of chemotherapy in degrading tumor growth. Plenty of pharmacological or non-pharmacological treatments are still under investigation, such as antioxidant medication (e.g. Acetyl-L-carnitine, glutamine, vit B12, fish oil, etc.), anxiolytics (e.g. venlafaxine), neuroprotective agents (e.g. infusion of calcium ions, magnesium ions), food supplements, acupuncture, light stimulation, etc. Acupuncture with the advantages of clinically effective, easy-practice and relatively safe, few studies revealed its effect on CIPN, however, there is still a lack of large clinical trials to evaluate its effectiveness.

(ii) Purpose of the research To investigate the efficacy of acupuncture on peripheral neuropathy after chemotherapy administration in patients with breast cancer.

(iii) Importance of the research Current studies revealed that acupuncture might be effective on CIPN, however, insufficient number of participants or lack of control groups limit the quality of clinical studies. Therefore, the aim of our study to conduct a randomized controlled clinical trial to evaluate the efficacy of acupuncture on peripheral neuropathy caused by chemotherapy.

Enrollment

20 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

20+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

The inclusion criteria will be: female more than 20 years of age; breast cancer with early stage at I-III; had completed chemotherapy; the neurotoxic chemotherapeutic agents included taxanes, platinums, or others; less than grade three in the Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) status; higher than grade one in National Cancer Institute-common terminology criteria for adverse events(NCI-CTCAE) scale.

The exclusion criteria will be: having less than three months in mean survival time, history of diabetic neuropathy before chemotherapy administration, history of other preexisting peripheral neuropathy, other inflammatory or metabolic arthritis, severe blood coagulation diseases or with latent bleeding tendency, unstable cardiovascular diseases, or other preexisting muscle-skeletal diseases.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

20 participants in 2 patient groups

The acupuncture group
Experimental group
Description:
Acupuncture treatment will be performed for 9 weeks. Acupuncture treatment will be performed for 9 weeks. The frequency of acupuncture will be twice a week for the first six weeks, and once a week for the following three weeks. 30 minutes needling at each treatment. Acupuncture points include Baihui(GV20), Qihai(CV6), Quchi(LI11), Hegu(LI4), Neiguan(P6), or Shenmen(HT7) for upper limbs. For plantar numbness, choose two acupoints to use in turn; use Weizhong(BL40), Sanyinjiao(SP6), or Zusanli(ST36) for lower limbs. If severe numbness occurred, Taixi(KI3) or Yongquan(K1) should be added for feet numbness. "De qi" sensation, such as soreness, numbness, pain, etc. will be achieved at each acupoints .
Treatment:
Other: acupuncture
The controlled group
Sham Comparator group
Description:
Acupuncture with superficial needling 0.5 cun (estimated 1cm with deviation depends on the body size of each participants) away from the acupoints, which only superficially penetrated the skin without feeling of "De Qi" sensation.
Treatment:
Other: acupuncture

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Chien-Chen Huang(Attending physician), master

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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