Should full weight-based cytotoxic chemotherapy doses be used to treat obese adult patients with cancer?
Obese adult patients with cancer
Full weight-based cytotoxic chemotherapy doses
Fixed-dose chemotherapy or non-obese patients receiving full weight-based doses
Short- or long-term toxicity (including myelosuppression)safety
The ASCO guideline recommends using full weight-based cytotoxic chemotherapy doses for obese adult patients with cancer, as it does not increase toxicity.
The Panel recommends that full weight-based cytotoxic chemotherapy doses be used to treat obese patients with cancer, particularly when the goal of treatment is cure. There is no evidence that short- or long-term toxicity is increased among obese patients receiving full weight-based doses. Most data indicate that myelosuppression is the same or less pronounced among the obese than the non-obese who are administered full weight-based doses. Clinicians should respond to all treatment-related toxicities in obese patients in the same ways they do for non-obese patients. The use of fixed-dose chemotherapy is rarely justified, but the Panel does recommend fixed dosing for a few select agents. The Panel recommends further research into the role of pharmacokinetics and pharmacogenetics to guide appropriate dosing of obese patients with cancer.
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Jennifer J. Griggs
Pamela B. Mangu
Holly Anderson
Journal of Clinical Oncology
American Cancer Society
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Griggs et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d82da0617ce96c42ae31a8 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1200/jco.2011.39.9436