AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study investigates how genetic variations in the EPHA genes are linked to the sensitivity of chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy (PN) in breast cancer patients receiving paclitaxel, which can limit treatment effectiveness.
  • - Genetic sequencing of 60 patients revealed that a specific variant in the EPHA5 gene (rs7349683) is associated with increased PN sensitivity, meaning patients with this variant may need shorter exposure to paclitaxel to avoid severe neuropathy symptoms.
  • - The findings suggest that using genetic markers like rs7349683 could help personalize paclitaxel treatment plans, potentially improving patient outcomes by minimizing toxic effects while maintaining efficacy.

Article Abstract

Aims: Chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy (PN) is a treatment limiting toxicity of paclitaxel. We evaluated if EPHA genetic variation (EPHA4, EPHA5, EPHA6, and EPHA8) is associated with PN sensitivity by accounting for variability in systemic paclitaxel exposure (time above threshold).

Methods: Germline DNA from 60 patients with breast cancer was sequenced. PN was measured using the 8-item sensory subscale (CIPN8) of the patient-reported CIPN20. Associations for 3 genetic models were tested by incorporating genetics into previously published PN prediction models integrating measured paclitaxel exposure and cumulative treatment. Significant associations were then tested for association with PN-related treatment disruption.

Results: EPHA5 rs7349683 (minor allele frequency = 0.32) was associated with increased PN sensitivity (β-coefficient = 0.39, 95% confidence interval 0.11-0.67, p = 0.007). Setting a maximum tolerable threshold of CIPN8 = 30, optimal paclitaxel exposure target is shorter for rs7349683 homozygous (11.6 h) than heterozygous (12.6 h) or wild-type (13.6 h) patients. Total number of missense variants (median = 0, range 0-2) was associated with decreased PN sensitivity (β-coefficient: -0.42, 95% confidence interval -0.72 to -0.12, P = .006). No association with treatment disruption was detected for the total number of missense variants or rs7349683.

Conclusion: Isolating toxicity sensitivity by accounting for exposure is a novel approach, and rs7349683 represents a promising marker for PN sensitivity that may be used to individualize paclitaxel treatment.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7163383PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/bcp.14192DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

paclitaxel exposure
12
genetic variation
8
peripheral neuropathy
8
sensitivity accounting
8
sensitivity β-coefficient
8
95% confidence
8
confidence interval
8
total number
8
number missense
8
missense variants
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!