AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study examined the relationship between pre-treatment blood levels of amino acids and the occurrence and severity of chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy (CIPN) in breast cancer patients treated with paclitaxel.
  • - While histidine levels were found not to be linked to the incidence of CIPN, some associations were noted between higher concentrations of glutamate, phenylalanine, tyrosine, and valine with increased CIPN severity, although these were not significant after further adjustments.
  • - Overall, the findings suggest that amino acid concentrations are not strong predictors of CIPN severity, indicating a need for future research to explore other potential biomarkers.

Article Abstract

Background: Chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy (CIPN) is a treatment-limiting and debilitating neurotoxicity of many commonly used anti-cancer agents, including paclitaxel. The objective of this study was to confirm the previously found inverse association between pre-treatment blood concentrations of histidine and CIPN occurrence and examine relationships of other amino acids with CIPN severity.

Methods: Pre-treatment serum concentrations of 20 amino acids were measured in the SWOG S0221 (NCT00070564) trial of patients with early-stage breast cancer receiving paclitaxel. The associations between amino acids and CIPN severity were tested in regression analysis adjusted for paclitaxel schedule, age, self-reported race, and body mass index with Bonferroni correction. The network of metabolic pathways of amino acids was analyzed using over-representation analysis. The partial correlation network of amino acids was evaluated using a debiased sparse partial correlation algorithm.

Results: In the primary analysis, histidine concentration was not associated with CIPN occurrence (odds ratio (OR) = 0.97 [0.83, 1.13], p = 0.72). In secondary analyses, higher concentrations of four amino acids, glutamate (β = 0.58 [0.23, 0.93], p = 0.001), phenylalanine (β = 0.54 [0.19, 0.89], p = 0.002), tyrosine (β = 0.57 [0.23, 0.91], p = 0.001), and valine (β = 0.58 [0.24, 0.92], p = 0.001) were associated with more severe CIPN, but none of these associations retained significance after adjustment. In the over-representation analysis, no amino acid metabolic pathways were significantly enriched (all FDR > 0.05). In the network of enriched pathways, glutamate metabolism had the highest centrality.

Conclusions: This analysis showed that pre-treatment serum amino acid concentrations are not strongly predictive of CIPN severity. Prospectively designed studies that assess non-amino acid metabolomics predictors are encouraged.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00280-024-04680-6DOI Listing

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