Real-time tissue elastography may provide additional characterization of breast lesions, improving specificity, particularly for low-suspicion lesions.
Body surface area (BSA)-based dosing leads to wide inter-individual variations in drug pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics, whereas body composition has been shown to be a more robust determinant of efficacy and toxicity of certain chemotherapeutic agents. We correlated various parameters of body composition with doxorubicin pharmacokinetics and hematologic toxicities in Asian patients with locally advanced or metastatic breast cancer. Our analysis included 84 patients from two studies who received pre- or post-operative single-agent doxorubicin; pharmacokinetic parameters were available for 44 patients. Body composition parameters were derived from CT cross-sectional images and population pharmacokinetic analysis was conducted using mixed-effects modeling. Higher intra-abdominal fat volume and fat ratio (intra-abdominal:total abdominal fat volume) correlated with greater incidence of grade 4 leukopenia on cycle 1 day 15 (mean intra-abdominal fat volume: 97.4 ± 46.5 cm(3) vs 63.4 ± 30.9 cm(3), p = 0.014; mean fat ratio: 0.43 ± 0.11 vs 0.33 ± 0.09, p = 0.012, grade 4 vs grade 0-3 leukopenia). On subset analysis, this relationship was maintained even in underweight patients. Concordantly, there were positive correlations between doxorubicin AUC and intra-abdominal fat volume as well as total abdominal fat volume (r (2) = 0.324 and 0.262, respectively, all p < 0.001). BSA and muscle volume did not predict for doxorubicin pharmacokinetics or toxicities. High-intra-abdominal fat volume but not BSA predicted for greater doxorubicin exposure and hematologic toxicities, suggesting that body composition is superior to BSA in determining doxorubicin pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics. Body composition has an emerging role in chemotherapy dose determination.
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