Efficacy and Security of Tetrodotoxin in the Treatment of Cancer-Related Pain: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Results
2.1. Study Selection
2.2. Study Characteristics
2.3. Meta-Analysis
2.3.1. Efficacy of Tetrodotoxin in RCTs
2.3.2. Security of Tetrodotoxin in RCTs
2.4. Risk of Bias
2.5. Publication Bias
3. Discussion
4. Conclusions
5. Materials and Methods
5.1. Protocol and Registration
5.2. PICO Research Question
5.3. Information Sources and Search Strategy
5.4. Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria
5.5. Article Selection
5.6. Data Extraction
5.7. Meta-Analysis and Statistics
5.8. Risk of Bias Assessment
5.9. Publication Bias
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Study/Clinical Phase/Condition | Number/Country | Administration/ Doses | Efficacy in Primary Outcome | Secondary Outcomes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Hagen et al., 2007 [38] Phase IIa SCP | 24 Canada | i.m. injections/ 4 days of 7.5, 15, 22.5, and 30 μg BID or 30 μg TID | In total, 17 of 31 (54.85%) patients had a ≥33% reduction in the intensity of the worst, average, or current pain for at least two consecutive days. | For BPI#9A (general activity), 13 responders and 4 non-responders improved. For BPI#9G (enjoyment of life), 12 responders and 0 non-responders improved. |
Hagen et al., 2008 [39] MSCP | 82 Canada | s.c. injections/ 4 days of 30 μg BID or placebo | In total, 16 of 38 (42%) patients in the TTX arm and 12 of 39 (31%) patients in the placebo arm were responders. | Improvements in pain or significant reductions in opioid use, along with improvements in QoL, were observed in 17 of 38 (45%) responders to TTX and 8 of 39 (21%) responders to placebo. The duration of analgesia was 19.5 days in the intervention group versus 14.3 in the placebo group (NNT: 4.2). |
Hagen et al., 2011 [40] MSCP | 45 Canada | s.c. injections/ 4 days of 30 μg BID | There were 16 (39%) responders, 5 (12%) clinical responders, and 20 (49%) non-responders to TTX in treatment cycle 1. In subsequent cycles, the effect on pain did not change. | After the first cycle of TTX at 30 μg BID for 4 days, pain relief lasted, on average, 21 days. The average duration of pain relief remained at about 20 days for all subsequent cycles. |
Hagen et al., 2017 [41] Phase III MSCP | 165 Australia, Canada, and NZ | s.c. injections/ 4 days of 30 μg BID or placebo | In total, 33 (50.8%) patients who received TTX and 29 (34.5%) patients who received a placebo were responders. | When adding QoL to the analysis, the proportions of responders to treatment with TTX during EPIP or LPIP were not statistically significant. The duration of the analgesic response was 56.7 days in the intervention group versus 9.9 days in the placebo group (NNT: 6.2). |
Goldlust et al., 2021 [42] Phase II CINP | 125 USA | s.c. injections/ 4 days of 7.5, 15, and 30 μg BID, 30 μg QD, or placebo | Numbers of responders: 7.5 µg BID: 9 (36.0%), 15 µg BID: 11 (45.8%), 30 µg QD: 10 (40.0%), 30 µg BID: 15 (57.7%), and placebo: 8 (32.0%). | On day 28, there were benefits of TTX at 15 μg BID and 30 μg BID on all outcome subscales of the SF-36 and the sensory and motor nerve function subscales of the EORTC CIPN20. |
Study | Mild Adverse Events | Severe Adverse Events |
---|---|---|
Hagen et al., 2007 [38] Phase IIa SCP | All 24 subjects in the 31 treatments experienced AEs (531 reported). Approximately 98% of the total were rated as mild, with paresthesia and hypesthesia the most repeated, followed by nausea. These AEs appeared to increase in frequency in a dose-dependent manner. | AEs in the 30 µg TID dose group led to three patients discontinuing treatment partway through the four-day treatment period and a subsequent decision to discontinue further dose escalation. One of these AEs was an episode of severe ataxia after the seventh injection of TTX, which resolved within 24 h. |
Hagen et al., 2008 [39] MSCP | In total, 648 of 690 AEs were considered mild or moderate, and 38 of 41 patients in the TTX group presented one or more AEs (92.7%). Overall, treatment-emergent AEs were greater in the TTX arm than in the placebo arm, but almost all were mild and related to tingling, numbness, or other transient sensory symptoms. | Three patients discontinued TTX (1) due to moderately severe but transient ataxia; (2) due to the development of malignant epidural spinal cord compression; or (3) due to the development of transient moderate dysphagia with a 3½ h duration that was probably related to the studied drug. |
Hagen et al., 2011 [40] MSCP | Most AEs were described as mild (82%) or moderate (13%) in severity; all were well tolerated and had short durations (from 20 min to 1 h). Close to half of the patients described mild peri-oral tingling or numbness. Transient nausea was also reported by approximately one third of patients. | Four serious AEs were reported. Only one was related to the studied drug. The patient started taking the studied drug at a dose of 30 μg BID, and an hour after the second dose on day 1, she experienced hypertension and dizziness. Both events resolved the same day, and the patient was discharged. |
Hagen et al., 2017 [41] Phase III MSCP | AEs were generally mild to moderate and transient. In the TTX group, all 77 patients experienced at least one AE that was considered drug-related. The most common were nausea, dizziness, oral numbness/tingling, and injection site irritation. | There were 12 serious AEs. Five AEs that occurred in three patients were probably related to TTX: ataxia (2), nystagmus (1), other neurotoxicity (1), and aspiration pneumonia (1). The aspiration pneumonia occurred in a patient who was at risk of aspiration. |
Goldlust et al., 2021 [42] Phase II CINP | Across the TTX cohorts, 80.0 to 92.3% of the patients experienced at least one AE. The most frequent were oral paresthesia (34/100 TTX patients) and oral hypesthesia (28/100 TTX patients). Other common AEs were headache (19/100 TTX patients) and nausea (13/100 TTX patients). | Four patients had serious AEs, three of which were possibly related to treatment (hypertension, paresthesia, extremity pain, and a burning sensation). Two patients withdrew due to AEs: one patient with moderate vertigo and another with vertigo and an influenza-like illness, which were possibly related. |
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Huerta, M.Á.; de la Nava, J.; Artacho-Cordón, A.; Nieto, F.R. Efficacy and Security of Tetrodotoxin in the Treatment of Cancer-Related Pain: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Mar. Drugs 2023, 21, 316. https://doi.org/10.3390/md21050316
Huerta MÁ, de la Nava J, Artacho-Cordón A, Nieto FR. Efficacy and Security of Tetrodotoxin in the Treatment of Cancer-Related Pain: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Marine Drugs. 2023; 21(5):316. https://doi.org/10.3390/md21050316
Chicago/Turabian StyleHuerta, Miguel Á., Javier de la Nava, Antonia Artacho-Cordón, and Francisco R. Nieto. 2023. "Efficacy and Security of Tetrodotoxin in the Treatment of Cancer-Related Pain: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis" Marine Drugs 21, no. 5: 316. https://doi.org/10.3390/md21050316
APA StyleHuerta, M. Á., de la Nava, J., Artacho-Cordón, A., & Nieto, F. R. (2023). Efficacy and Security of Tetrodotoxin in the Treatment of Cancer-Related Pain: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Marine Drugs, 21(5), 316. https://doi.org/10.3390/md21050316