Long-term adjuvant administration of temozolomide impacts serum ions concentration in high-grade glioma

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Abstract

Background: Adjuvant temozolomide (TMZ) chemotherapy with standard regimen remarkably improves survival in patients with high-grade glioma (HGG). However, the influence of long-term TMZ chemotherapy on serum ions concentration is unclear. Methods: One hundred and thirty-eight patients with HGG were included. Their blood samples were collected for blood biochemistry and routine test. The alteration in serum ions concentration, total protein, albumin, globin, and blood cells counts were used to identify the impact of long-term TMZ chemotherapy. Results: Through the comparation of quantitative value of diverse parameters among different chemotherapy cycles, we identified that serum potassium concentration had a downward trend after TMZ administration (1st vs. 6th, p < 0.001; 1st vs. 12th, p < 0.001). Additionally, the correlation analysis showed that platelets was negatively correlated with chemotherapy cycles (r = − 0.649, p = 0.023). The hematological adverse events mainly centered on grade 1 to 2. Conclusion: Long-term administration of TMZ may lead to serum ions disturbance. Besides the myelosuppression, we should pay attention to the alteration in serum ions concentration, and give patients proper symptomatic treatment when necessary.

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Zhong, L., Yang, P., Zhang, C., Wang, Z., Jiang, T., Chen, B., … Qiu, X. (2022). Long-term adjuvant administration of temozolomide impacts serum ions concentration in high-grade glioma. Chinese Neurosurgical Journal, 8(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s41016-022-00271-7

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