Acetyl-L-carnitine for the prevention of taxane-induced neuropathy in patients with breast cancer: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
- 2023-03
- Research in pharmaceutical sciences 18(2)
- Mahnaz Momenzadeh
- Amir Aria
- Keyvan Ghadimi
- Azadeh Moghaddas
- PubMed: 36873277
- DOI: 10.4103/1735-5362.367791
Study Design
- Type
- Review
- Population
- patients with taxane-induced neuropathy (TIN)
- Methods
- systematic review and meta-analysis of 3 articles, using random-effect model for 12-24 weeks' analysis
- Duration
- 12-24 weeks
Background and purpose
Peripheral neuropathy is one of the most prevalent and undesirable side effects of taxane-containing chemotherapy regimens. This study aimed to investigate the effect of acetyl-L-carnitine (ALC) on the prevention of taxane-induced neuropathy (TIN).Experimental approach
MEDLINE, PubMed, Cochrane Library, Embase, Web of Science, and Google scholar were systemically applied as electronic databases from 2010 to 2019. The current systematic review was carried out based on the main considerations of PRISMA preferential reporting items for systematic review and meta-analyses. Since there was no significant discrepancy, the random-effect model was used for 12-24 weeks' analysis (I2 = 0%, P = 0.999).Findings/results
Twelve related titles and abstracts were found during the search, 6 of them were excluded in the first phase. In the second phase, the full text of the remaining 6 articles was comprehensively evaluated and 3 papers were rejected. Finally, 3 articles complied with the inclusion criteria and pooled analyses. The meta-analysis showed a risk ratio of 0.796 (95% CI between 0.486 and 1.303), so, the effects model was used for 12-24 weeks' analysis (I2 = 0%, P = 0.999) since no significant discrepancies were observed. There was no evidence of ALC's positive effect on the prevention of TIN during 12 weeks, and it was revealed that ALC significantly increased TIN in 24 weeks.Conclusion and implications
According to our findings, the hypothesis that ALC had a positive effect on preventing TIN in 12 weeks has not been proved; however, ALC led to an increase in the TIN in 24 weeks.Research Insights
it was revealed that ALC significantly increased TIN in 24 weeks
- Effect
- Harmful
- Effect size
- Large
Adverse Events Reported
it was revealed that ALC significantly increased TIN in 24 weeks
- Finding
- Increased risk
- Magnitude
- risk ratio of 0.796 (95% CI between 0.486 and 1.303) for 12-24 weeks; ALC significantly increased TIN in 24 weeks
- Significant
- Yes
There was no evidence of ALC's positive effect on the prevention of TIN during 12 weeks
- Finding
- No significant difference
- Magnitude
- risk ratio of 0.796 (95% CI between 0.486 and 1.303)
- Significant
- No