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Thrombotic microangiopathy in untreated myeloma patients receiving carfilzomib, cyclophosphamide and dexamethasone on the CARDAMON study.

Authors :
Camilleri, Marquita
Cuadrado, Maria
Phillips, Elizabeth
Wilson, William
Jenner, Richard
Pang, Gavin
Kamora, Sumaiya
Streetly, Matthew
Popat, Rakesh
Bygrave, Ceri
Owen, Roger
Cavenagh, James
Chapman, Mike
Sive, Jonathan
Eccersley, Lydia
Sheaff, Michael
Benjamin, Reuben
Ramasamy, Karthik
Cook, Gordon
Virchis, Andres
Source :
British Journal of Haematology. May2021, Vol. 193 Issue 4, p750-760. 11p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Summary: Proteasome inhibitors have been associated with thrombotic microangiopathy (TMA) — a group of disorders characterised by occlusive microvascular thrombosis causing microangiopathic haemolytic anaemia, thrombocytopenia and end‐organ damage. To date, carfilzomib‐associated TMA has predominantly been described in relapsed/refractory myeloma patients. We report eight patients with newly diagnosed myeloma who experienced TMA events while receiving carfilzomib on the phase II CARDAMON trial. The first three occurred during maintenance single‐agent carfilzomib, two occurred at induction with carfilzomib given with cyclophosphamide and dexamethasone (KCd) and three occurred during KCd consolidation. At TMA presentation 6/8 were hypertensive; 7/8 had acute kidney injury and in three, renal impairment persisted after resolution of TMA in other respects. The mechanism of carfilzomib‐associated TMA remains unclear, though patients with known hypertension seem particularly susceptible. Given the first three cases occurred during maintenance after a longer than five‐week treatment break, a protocol amendment was instituted with: aggressive hypertension management, carfilzomib step‐up dosing (20 mg/m2 on day 1) at start of maintenance before dose escalation to 56 mg/m2 maximum, and adding 10 mg dexamethasone as premedication to maintenance carfilzomib infusions. No further TMA events occurred during maintenance following this amendment and the TMA incidence reduced from 4·2 to 1·6 per 1 000 patient cycles. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00071048
Volume :
193
Issue :
4
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
British Journal of Haematology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
150291770
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/bjh.17377