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د. سلطان بن محمد بجاد العتيبي

أستاذ مساعد

Assistant Professor

كلية العلوم الطبية التطبيقية
مبنى ٢٤ جامعه الملك سعود
المنشورات
مقال فى مجلة
2026

Dose-dependent neurotoxic chemotherapy and corneal nerve morphological changes

Clinical relevance

Chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy (CIPN) is a common, serious, long-term complication of neurotoxic chemotherapy that alters nerve fibre morphology, and is one of the most common dose-limiting factors. Detection is challenging and usually occurs after significant symptoms. Thus, early and accurate detection is crucial.

Background

CIPN accounts for the main dose-limiting factor in cancer treatment. Its early detection however is challenging and often occurs only after the development of significant symptoms. In-vivo corneal confocal microscopy may be a potential method of detecting early changes in CIPN. The aim of this study was to determine whether corneal nerve parameters enable early detection of CIPN, to report any dose-dependent effects of treatments used, and to observe longitudinally corneal nerve changes during and after treatment.

Methods

Fifteen individuals receiving taxane-based chemotherapy for breast, gynaecological, or prostate cancers were recruited and compared to an oxaliplatin-treated group (n = 18). Corneal nerve measurements were taken at the beginning, middle, and end of treatment, and up to 12 months post-treatment. Central corneal and inferior whorl nerve fibre images were obtained with an in-vivo laser scanning confocal microscope.

Results

A dose-dependent reduction in corneal nerves was observed for every 100 mg/m2 of neurotoxic chemotherapy, especially in taxane-treated participants (p = 0.02). The average nerve fibre length, which refers to both the central cornea and inferior whorl, showed significant changes earlier in the treatment course. After treatment, especially in the taxane-treated group, CIPN participants had lower corneal nerve fibre length at the middle and end of treatment compared to those without persistent neuropathy (p = 0.02 and p = 0.006, respectively).

Conclusion

Average nerve fibre length loss may have clinical utility as an early marker of CIPN progression. Imaging a wider area of the sub-basal corneal nerve plexus including the inferior whorl region may be more beneficial for monitoring early neuropathic changes.

مزيد من المنشورات
publications

Clinical relevance

بواسطة Jeremy Chung Bo Chiang, Dimitra Makrynioti, David Goldstein, Thomas J Naduvilath, Terry Trinh, Siobhan O’Neill, Elizabeth Hovey, Craig R Lewis, Michael Friedlander, Kimberley Au, Sultan Alotaibi, Susanna B Park, Maria Markoulli, Arun V Krishnan
2026
publications
بواسطة Sultan Alotaibi
2021