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. 2022 Mar:164:137-154.
doi: 10.1016/j.ejca.2021.11.001. Epub 2021 Dec 2.

Clinical pharmacology of cytotoxic drugs in neonates and infants: Providing evidence-based dosing guidance

Affiliations

Clinical pharmacology of cytotoxic drugs in neonates and infants: Providing evidence-based dosing guidance

A Laura Nijstad et al. Eur J Cancer. 2022 Mar.

Abstract

Cancer in neonates and infants is a rare but challenging entity. Treatment is complicated by marked physiological changes during the first year of life, excess rates of toxicity, mortality, and late effects. Dose optimisation of chemotherapeutics may be an important step to improving outcomes. Body size-based dosing is used for most anticancer drugs used in infants. However, dose regimens are generally not evidence based, and dosing strategies are frequently inconsistent between tumour types and treatment protocols. In this review, we collate available pharmacological evidence supporting dosing regimens in infants for a wide range of cytotoxic drugs. A systematic review was conducted, and available data ranked by a level of evidence (1-5) and a grade of recommendation (A-D) provided on a consensus basis, with recommended dosing approaches indicated as appropriate. For 9 of 29 drugs (busulfan, carboplatin, cyclophosphamide, daunorubicin, etoposide, fludarabine, isotretinoin, melphalan and vincristine), grade A was scored, indicating sufficient pharmacological evidence to recommend a dosing algorithm for infants. For busulfan and carboplatin, sufficient data were available to recommend therapeutic drug monitoring in infants. For eight drugs (actinomycin D, blinatumomab, dinutuximab, doxorubicin, mercaptopurine, pegaspargase, thioguanine and topotecan), some pharmacological evidence was available to guide dosing (graded as B). For the remaining drugs, including commonly used agents such as cisplatin, cytarabine, ifosfamide, and methotrexate, pharmacological evidence for dosing in infants was limited or non-existent: grades C and D were scored for 10 and 2 drugs, respectively. The review provides clinically relevant evidence-based dosing guidance for cytotoxic drugs in neonates and infants.

Keywords: Antineoplastic agents; Child; Clinical protocols; Infant; Medical oncology; Paediatrics; Pharmacokinetics; Pharmacology; Therapeutic drug monitoring.

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Conflict of interest statement

Conflict of interest statement There are no competing interests to declare.

Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Graphical summary of the methods used for labelling articles with a specific level and grading of the chemotherapeutic agents.
Fig. 2
Fig. 2
Bar plot displaying the number of studies for each chemotherapeutic agent per evidence level (primary y-axis), as well as the number of infants included in total in all published studies (secondary y-axis).

Comment in

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