1. A novel outpatient regimen in management of fluoropyrimidine-induced cardiotoxicity
- Author
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Anwaar Saeed, Anup Kasi, Joaquina Baranda, Charles B. Porter, Joseph Bennett, Pramod Gaudel, Weijing Sun, and Raed Al-Rajabi
- Subjects
Curative intent ,Capecitabine ,Oncology ,Cancer Research ,Cardiotoxicity ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Regimen ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
e15613 Background: Fluoropyrimidines, such as 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) and capecitabine, are commonly used chemotherapies for solid tumors, and essential for curative intent treatment of colorectal cancer. But sometimes, their use may be limited by cardiac toxicity limiting the possibility of cure in some patients. Cardiotoxicity could be asymptomatic (EKG changes) or manifested as chest pain, arrhythmias, acute coronary syndrome or death. Rechallenging may be daunting and it may result in interruption or even discontinuation of planned chemo. Traditionally, nitrates and/or IV/oral calcium channel blockers (CCB) have been used for management of fluoropyrimidine-induced cardiotoxicity but without much benefit. Ranolazine, an oral antianginal drug approved for chronic angina, diminishes myocardial ischemia by reducing calcium overload caused by inhibition of late sodium current and it does not affect heart rate or blood pressure. Our objective was to evaluate the efficacy of our novel approach using ranolazine with other traditional drugs. Methods: 8 patients (median age 49.5 yrs) with fluoropyrimidine induced cardiotoxicity were retrospectively analyzed. They were rechallenged with the planned fluoropyrimidine regimen with our 3 drug cardioprotective regimen (KU protocol). This included oral Ranolazine 1000mg BID and Amlodipine 2.5 mg daily to start the day before starting 5FU infusion/oral capecitabine and to continue it until the day after completion of infusion/treatment, and Nitroglycerin paste 1 inch every 6 hours starting before infusion and continue until it was completed. These meds were discontinued upon completion of chemo. Results: 8 patients were rechallenged with fluoropyrimidine utilizing KU protocol, 6 patients (75%) were able to complete previously planned fluoropyrimidine regimen. One pt (*) discontinued capecitabine due to recurrent chest pain and treatment was switched to 5FU based regimen with KU protocol, which pt was able to complete without chest pain. Another pt (**), 5FU was stopped due to severe diarrhea, not due to cardiotoxicity. All pts tolerated KU protocol well. Conclusions: In our small, single center experience, we were able to safely and effectively rechallenge pts with fluoropyrimidines and complete curative intent treatment with our KU protocol. This protocol uses FDA approved oral and transcutaneous drugs without requiring a healthcare personnel to administer an IV CCB that can cause precipitous bradycardia and/or hypotension. Our results need validation in a larger cohort. [Table: see text]
- Published
- 2021
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