Mechanisms, Characteristics, and Treatment of Neuropathic Pain and Peripheral Neuropathy Associated with Dinutuximab in Neuroblastoma Patients.
Stefano MastrangeloSerena RivettiSilvia TriaricoAlberto RomanoGiorgio Attina'Palma MauriziAntonio RuggieroPublished in: International journal of molecular sciences (2021)
Prognosis of metastatic neuroblastoma is very poor. Its treatment includes induction chemotherapy, surgery, high-dose chemotherapy, radiotherapy, and maintenance with retinoic acid, associated with the anti-GD2 monoclonal antibody (ch14.18) dinutuximab. Immunotherapy determined a significant improvement in survival rate and is also utilized in relapsed and resistant neuroblastoma patients. Five courses of dinutuximab 100 mg/m2 are usually administered as a 10-day continuous infusion or over 5 consecutive days every 5 weeks. Dinutuximab targets the disialoganglioside GD2, which is highly expressed on neuroblastoma cells and minimally present on the surface of normal human neurons, peripheral pain fibers, and skin melanocytes. Anti GD2 antibodies bind to surface GD2 and determine the lysis of neuroblastoma cells induced by immune response via the antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity and the complement-dependent cytotoxicity. Dinutuximab has significant side effects, including neuropathic pain, peripheral neuropathy, hypersensitivity reactions, capillary leak syndrome, photophobia, and hypotension. The most important side effect is neuropathic pain, which is triggered by the same antibody-antigen immune response, but generates ectopic activity in axons, which results in hyperalgesia and spontaneous pain. Pain can be severe especially in the first courses of dinutuximab infusion, and requires the administration of gabapentin and continuous morphine infusion. This paper will focus on the incidence, mechanisms, characteristics, and treatment of neuropathic pain and peripheral neuropathy due to dinutuximab administration in neuroblastoma patients.
Keyphrases
- neuropathic pain
- spinal cord
- spinal cord injury
- immune response
- end stage renal disease
- high dose
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- low dose
- prognostic factors
- small cell lung cancer
- squamous cell carcinoma
- endothelial cells
- induced apoptosis
- locally advanced
- dendritic cells
- minimally invasive
- monoclonal antibody
- cell cycle arrest
- combination therapy
- multiple myeloma
- cell proliferation
- hodgkin lymphoma
- diffuse large b cell lymphoma
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- soft tissue
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- acute coronary syndrome
- smoking cessation