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Immunosuppression and atypical infections in CML patients treated with dasatinib at 140 mg daily.

Authors :
Sillaber C
Herrmann H
Bennett K
Rix U
Baumgartner C
Böhm A
Herndlhofer S
Tschachler E
Superti-Furga G
Jäger U
Valent P
Source :
European journal of clinical investigation [Eur J Clin Invest] 2009 Dec; Vol. 39 (12), pp. 1098-109. Date of Electronic Publication: 2009 Sep 09.
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

Background: The multikinase inhibitor dasatinib exerts growth-inhibitory effects in patients with imatinib-resistant chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML). In first clinical trials, side effects of dasatinib, 140 mg daily, were reported to be mild and tolerable.<br />Patients and Methods: We examined the side effect profile in 16 patients with imatinib-resistant CML who received 140 mg dasatinib daily in our center.<br />Results: Dasatinib produced substantial and sometimes severe or even life-threatening side effects with > or = 10% body weight loss (6/16 patients), pleural effusions grade II or higher (12/16) and infectious complications (12/16), including atypical infections not seen in imatinib-treated patients. One patient developed Epstein-Barr-Virus-positive mucosal leucoplakia, one died from pneumonia caused by pneumocystis carinii and three patients developed a skin-cancer. Most events were recorded within the first 2 years of therapy, only skin tumours developed after the second year. In ex vivo experiments performed in dasatinib-treated patients, transient suppression of IgE-dependent activation of blood basophils and TcR-dependent activation of T-lymphocytes was found. Moreover, in drug-binding studies, dasatinib was found to bind to several key kinase-targets of the immune system including Lyn and Btk, in mast cell, basophil, B-cell and T-cell lines.<br />Conclusion: Dasatinib acts not only anti-neoplastic in CML but may also act as an immunosuppressive agent when applied at 140 mg daily, and produces frequent pleural effusions and weight loss in advanced CML.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1365-2362
Volume :
39
Issue :
12
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
European journal of clinical investigation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
19744184
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2362.2009.02206.x