Can Personalized Tourniquet Systems Prevent Chemotherapy-induced Alopecia?

Authors

  • Jim A. McEwen University of British Columbia; Western Clinical Engineering Ltd.
  • Jeswin Jeyasurya Western Clinical Engineering Ltd.
  • Michael Jameson Western Clinical Engineering Ltd.
  • Fuschia Howard University of British Columbia
  • Shirin Abadi British Columbia Cancer Agency
  • Christine Simmons British Columbia Cancer Agency

Abstract

Alopecia (hair loss) is a common consequence of cancer treatment known to have a profound impact on quality of life.  Tourniquet technologies have been investigated from the mid-1960s to early 1980s as a strategy for preventing chemotherapy-induced alopecia (CIA) but their ambiguous results precluded incorporation into any standard of treatment.  Our hypothesis is that fundamental advances inherent in personalized tourniquet systems developed within our group over 38 years enables the optimal, safe, comfortable and reliable stoppage of penetration of arterial blood into the scalp during infusion of chemotherapeutic agents, thereby preventing CIA and improving quality of life. This paper describes these advances, and presents options for integration into various treatment protocols involving modern chemotherapeutic agents having differing pharmacokinetics. Personalized tourniquet systems offer significant potential to safely prevent CIA, thereby improving quality of life with low treatment cost and low impact on treatment times and workflow.

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Published

2016-05-24

How to Cite

[1]
J. A. McEwen, J. Jeyasurya, M. Jameson, F. Howard, S. Abadi, and C. Simmons, “Can Personalized Tourniquet Systems Prevent Chemotherapy-induced Alopecia?”, CMBES Proc., vol. 39, no. 1, May 2016.

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Section

Academic