Objective: To compare acute renal toxicity of 2 conditioning regimens of total body irradiation/cyclophosphamide (TBI-Cy) and Ifosfamide, Carboplatin, and Etoposide (ICE).
Methods: Between August 1996 and February 2004, patients treated with autologous peripheral stem cell transplantation in the Department of Medical and Radiation Oncology, Gulhane Military Medical School, Ankara, Turkey with 2 different conditioning regimens was comparatively analyzed for acute renal toxicity in the early post-transplant period. Forty-seven patients received ICE regimen with 12 g/m2; 1.2 g/m2; and 1.2 g/m2 divided to 6 consecutive days, whereas 21 patients received 12 Gy TBI (6 fractions twice daily in 3 consecutive days) and 60 mg/m2/day cyclophosphamide for 2 days.
Results: Sixty-eight patients were evaluated in this study. There was no significant difference in baseline renal function between patients in the ICE and TBI-Cy groups. Eleven patients developed nephrotoxicity (23.4%) in the ICE group while one patient (4.8%) in the TBI-Cy group developed nephrotoxicity (p=0.06). Five out of 11 patients developing nephrotoxicity in ICE group required hemodialysis and subsequently 4 (8.5%) of them died. In contrast, one patient (4.8%) died due to nephrotoxicity despite hemodialysis in the TBI-Cy arm.
Conclusion: This study reveals that the TBI-Cy conditioning regimen seems no more nephrotoxic than an ICE regimen particularly in patients who had used cisplatin prior to transplantation.