If you are being given a drug that can cause peripheral neuropathy, your doctor will monitor you for signs of nerve damage before each treatment. Symptoms are often mild to begin with and gradually become more troublesome and severe. The earlier that nerve damage is detected, the better. It is therefore important to tell your doctor if you notice any new symptoms that may be caused by the treatment or if your symptoms are getting worse.
If an anti-cancer drug is causing peripheral neuropathy, your doctor will assess how much your nerves are affected. This information helps them to decide whether to continue your treatment, reduce the dose or stop the drug. There are various ways your doctor may assess your symptoms:
- Finding out how your symptoms are affecting your daily activities
- Establishing your ability to sense where parts of your body are when your eyes are closed.
- Checking whether the reflexes in your ankles, knees and wrists are working. Everyone has points on our body which, if hit gently with a rubber hammer, will normally respond with an automatic (reflex) movement.
- Testing for numbness or loss of sensation (pinprick test). This test measures whether you have lost some or any feeling in particular areas of the body such as the feet, lower legs and hands. You will be asked to say if you can feel a pin gently touching your skin in the areas of your body that may be affected by nerve damage.
- Assessing your balance and coordination; for example, by asking you to walk in a straight line.
Other, more specialised, tests are also sometimes done:
Nerve conduction studies assess the number of nerve cells that are working, and test the speed at which your nerves conduct an impulse.
Electromyography (EMG) records the response of the nerve or muscle to an electrical impulse.
Management of peripheral neuropathy There isn’t a treatment to prevent or reverse nerve damage caused by anti-cancer drugs. Studies are looking at various drug treatments, such as amifostine and xaliproden to see if they can help to protect against nerve damage during anti-cancer treatment. There are also studies looking into whether any treatments can reverse nerve damage that has occurred. But, at the moment, there isn’t enough evidence that any of these drugs work.
The most effective treatment for peripheral neuropathy is to prevent further damage to the nerves. Sometimes, it can help to lower the dose of the drug, that is causing the problem. If your symptoms continue to get worse, your doctors may have to stop the drug.
In most people, symptoms gradually improve once the drug is stopped, but they can sometimes continue to get worse for a few weeks. This is known as coasting.
Stopping treatment because of symptoms can be very difficult for some people to accept, especially if the treatment is working well. Your doctors will usually discuss with you whether another type of anti-cancer drug can be given instead.
Alternatively, some other kind of treatment – such as radiotherapy – may be suggested. It is extremely important not to stop treatment without first talking to your cancer specialist.
Most people find that their symptoms gradually improve with time as the nerves slowly recover. This may take several months or more. For some people, nerve damage will be permanent. But, in this situation, many people find that their symptoms become less troublesome over time, as they adapt and find ways of coping with the changes.