Fundamental problems with pediatric adaptive dosing of carboplatin using nuclear-medicine-based estimates of renal function.
Peter C AdamsonGareth J VealRichard B WomerHolly J MeanyMelanie Brooke BernhardtA Lindsay FrazierFrank Milton BalisPublished in: Pediatric blood & cancer (2019)
Wide variation in GFR obtained with nuclear-medicine-based tests in children with cancer primarily results from systematic methodologic errors. Formulas for calculating carboplatin dose produce additional and substantial variation that may place children with cancer at unnecessary risk for excessive toxicity or underdosing. These findings indicate a need for the development of a uniform, validated method for GFR determination in children that should be utilized in all centers. Currently, adaptive dosing of carboplatin based on GFR has serious limitations and in most clinical settings should arguably not be used in place of body-surface-area-based dosing.