AFib risk with cancer drugs underestimated

Article Type
Changed
Thu, 04/13/2023 - 10:29

Atrial fibrillation (AFib) is a known and serious side effect of some cancer treatments, but it is underreported in cancer drug trials, French investigators said in a new report.

As a result, oncologists likely underestimate the risk of atrial fibrillation when new cancer drugs come to market, they said.

The team came to these conclusions after conducting a meta-analysis of 191 phase 2 or 3 clinical trials that included 26,604 patients. The trials investigated 15 anticancer drugs used as monotherapy.

The meta-analysis showed that the annualized incidence rate of AFib ranged from 0.26 cases per 100 person-years – about the same as placebo – to 4.92 cases, a nearly 20 times’ higher risk.

Rates were the highest for ibrutinib, clofarabine, and ponatinib.

The study was published in JACC: CardioOncology, a journal of the American College of Cardiology.

Actual rates of AFib are probably higher than what they found in this meta-analysis, the authors suspect, because most oncology trials only identify and report severe cases of AFib that require immediate medical attention. Less severe cases can also lead to serious complications, including strokes, but they go unreported, said the investigators, led by Joachim Alexandre, MD, PhD, a member of the cardio-oncology program at the University of Caen Normandie Hospital Center, France.

“These findings suggest a global and systemic underreporting and/or underidentification of cardiotoxicity among cancer clinical trial participants,” and AFib reporting is “particularly affected,” they said.
 

Call for routine monitoring

The root of the problem is the lack of routine rhythm monitoring in cancer trials. This in turn “leads to a significant underestimation of AFib incidence” and rates “markedly lower than those observed among real-life” patients, the authors pointed out.

To address the issue, Dr. Alexandre and his team called for routine cardiac monitoring in trials to capture the true incidence of AFib and to “clearly define which anticancer drugs are significantly associated” with the condition.

Approached for comment, Michael G. Fradley, MD, medical director of cardio-oncology at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, agreed.

“It’s incredibly important” to “identify the drugs most likely to cause arrhythmias and determine the best prevention and treatment strategies. Unfortunately, systematic evaluation of arrhythmias in cancer clinical trials has often been lacking,” Dr. Fradley told this news organization.

The investigators said the issue is particularly pressing for drugs known to be associated with AFib. For Bruton’s tyrosine kinase inhibitors such as ibrutinib, for instance, they call for standardize AFib detection in trials “not only on 12-lead ECGs” for symptomatic AFib but also with “longer-term ambulatory monitoring or insertable cardiac monitors to detect subclinical AFib.”

Dr. Fradley said there might also be a role for newer wearable technologies that can detect arrhythmias through a skin patch or by other means.
 

Details of the meta-analysis

The investigators pulled the 191 studies they used in their meta-analysis from the ClinicalTrials.gov database.

The trials covered anticancer drugs used as monotherapy up to Sept. 18, 2020. Almost half were randomized trials, but only seven had placebo arms. Trials involving hematologic cancers outnumbered those involving solid tumors.

The 15 drugs examined were dacarbazine, abiraterone, clofarabine, azacitidine, ibrutinib, nilotinib, ponatinib, midostaurin, ipilimumab, aldesleukin, lenalidomide, pomalidomide, rituximab, bortezomib, and docetaxel.

The annualized incidence AFib rates per 100 person-years were 4.92 cases for ibrutinib, 2.38 cases for clofarabine, and 2.35 cases for ponatinib.

The lowest AFib rates were for ipilimumab (0.26 cases), rituximab (0.27), and nilotinib (0.29).

For placebo, the annualized rate was 0.25 cases per 100 person-years.

The team said caution is warranted regarding their estimations for clofarabine and midostaurin (0.65 cases) because no trials were registered after September 2009, when adverse event reporting became mandatory. As a result, estimates may be artificially low.

One of the limits of the study is that it focused on monotherapy in an age when combination treatment is generally the rule for cancer, the authors noted.

No external funding was reported for the study. Dr. Alexandre has received honoraria for presentations and consulting fees from Bayer, BMS, Pfizer, Amgen, and Bioserenity.
 

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Publications
Topics
Sections

Atrial fibrillation (AFib) is a known and serious side effect of some cancer treatments, but it is underreported in cancer drug trials, French investigators said in a new report.

As a result, oncologists likely underestimate the risk of atrial fibrillation when new cancer drugs come to market, they said.

The team came to these conclusions after conducting a meta-analysis of 191 phase 2 or 3 clinical trials that included 26,604 patients. The trials investigated 15 anticancer drugs used as monotherapy.

The meta-analysis showed that the annualized incidence rate of AFib ranged from 0.26 cases per 100 person-years – about the same as placebo – to 4.92 cases, a nearly 20 times’ higher risk.

Rates were the highest for ibrutinib, clofarabine, and ponatinib.

The study was published in JACC: CardioOncology, a journal of the American College of Cardiology.

Actual rates of AFib are probably higher than what they found in this meta-analysis, the authors suspect, because most oncology trials only identify and report severe cases of AFib that require immediate medical attention. Less severe cases can also lead to serious complications, including strokes, but they go unreported, said the investigators, led by Joachim Alexandre, MD, PhD, a member of the cardio-oncology program at the University of Caen Normandie Hospital Center, France.

“These findings suggest a global and systemic underreporting and/or underidentification of cardiotoxicity among cancer clinical trial participants,” and AFib reporting is “particularly affected,” they said.
 

Call for routine monitoring

The root of the problem is the lack of routine rhythm monitoring in cancer trials. This in turn “leads to a significant underestimation of AFib incidence” and rates “markedly lower than those observed among real-life” patients, the authors pointed out.

To address the issue, Dr. Alexandre and his team called for routine cardiac monitoring in trials to capture the true incidence of AFib and to “clearly define which anticancer drugs are significantly associated” with the condition.

Approached for comment, Michael G. Fradley, MD, medical director of cardio-oncology at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, agreed.

“It’s incredibly important” to “identify the drugs most likely to cause arrhythmias and determine the best prevention and treatment strategies. Unfortunately, systematic evaluation of arrhythmias in cancer clinical trials has often been lacking,” Dr. Fradley told this news organization.

The investigators said the issue is particularly pressing for drugs known to be associated with AFib. For Bruton’s tyrosine kinase inhibitors such as ibrutinib, for instance, they call for standardize AFib detection in trials “not only on 12-lead ECGs” for symptomatic AFib but also with “longer-term ambulatory monitoring or insertable cardiac monitors to detect subclinical AFib.”

Dr. Fradley said there might also be a role for newer wearable technologies that can detect arrhythmias through a skin patch or by other means.
 

Details of the meta-analysis

The investigators pulled the 191 studies they used in their meta-analysis from the ClinicalTrials.gov database.

The trials covered anticancer drugs used as monotherapy up to Sept. 18, 2020. Almost half were randomized trials, but only seven had placebo arms. Trials involving hematologic cancers outnumbered those involving solid tumors.

The 15 drugs examined were dacarbazine, abiraterone, clofarabine, azacitidine, ibrutinib, nilotinib, ponatinib, midostaurin, ipilimumab, aldesleukin, lenalidomide, pomalidomide, rituximab, bortezomib, and docetaxel.

The annualized incidence AFib rates per 100 person-years were 4.92 cases for ibrutinib, 2.38 cases for clofarabine, and 2.35 cases for ponatinib.

The lowest AFib rates were for ipilimumab (0.26 cases), rituximab (0.27), and nilotinib (0.29).

For placebo, the annualized rate was 0.25 cases per 100 person-years.

The team said caution is warranted regarding their estimations for clofarabine and midostaurin (0.65 cases) because no trials were registered after September 2009, when adverse event reporting became mandatory. As a result, estimates may be artificially low.

One of the limits of the study is that it focused on monotherapy in an age when combination treatment is generally the rule for cancer, the authors noted.

No external funding was reported for the study. Dr. Alexandre has received honoraria for presentations and consulting fees from Bayer, BMS, Pfizer, Amgen, and Bioserenity.
 

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Atrial fibrillation (AFib) is a known and serious side effect of some cancer treatments, but it is underreported in cancer drug trials, French investigators said in a new report.

As a result, oncologists likely underestimate the risk of atrial fibrillation when new cancer drugs come to market, they said.

The team came to these conclusions after conducting a meta-analysis of 191 phase 2 or 3 clinical trials that included 26,604 patients. The trials investigated 15 anticancer drugs used as monotherapy.

The meta-analysis showed that the annualized incidence rate of AFib ranged from 0.26 cases per 100 person-years – about the same as placebo – to 4.92 cases, a nearly 20 times’ higher risk.

Rates were the highest for ibrutinib, clofarabine, and ponatinib.

The study was published in JACC: CardioOncology, a journal of the American College of Cardiology.

Actual rates of AFib are probably higher than what they found in this meta-analysis, the authors suspect, because most oncology trials only identify and report severe cases of AFib that require immediate medical attention. Less severe cases can also lead to serious complications, including strokes, but they go unreported, said the investigators, led by Joachim Alexandre, MD, PhD, a member of the cardio-oncology program at the University of Caen Normandie Hospital Center, France.

“These findings suggest a global and systemic underreporting and/or underidentification of cardiotoxicity among cancer clinical trial participants,” and AFib reporting is “particularly affected,” they said.
 

Call for routine monitoring

The root of the problem is the lack of routine rhythm monitoring in cancer trials. This in turn “leads to a significant underestimation of AFib incidence” and rates “markedly lower than those observed among real-life” patients, the authors pointed out.

To address the issue, Dr. Alexandre and his team called for routine cardiac monitoring in trials to capture the true incidence of AFib and to “clearly define which anticancer drugs are significantly associated” with the condition.

Approached for comment, Michael G. Fradley, MD, medical director of cardio-oncology at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, agreed.

“It’s incredibly important” to “identify the drugs most likely to cause arrhythmias and determine the best prevention and treatment strategies. Unfortunately, systematic evaluation of arrhythmias in cancer clinical trials has often been lacking,” Dr. Fradley told this news organization.

The investigators said the issue is particularly pressing for drugs known to be associated with AFib. For Bruton’s tyrosine kinase inhibitors such as ibrutinib, for instance, they call for standardize AFib detection in trials “not only on 12-lead ECGs” for symptomatic AFib but also with “longer-term ambulatory monitoring or insertable cardiac monitors to detect subclinical AFib.”

Dr. Fradley said there might also be a role for newer wearable technologies that can detect arrhythmias through a skin patch or by other means.
 

Details of the meta-analysis

The investigators pulled the 191 studies they used in their meta-analysis from the ClinicalTrials.gov database.

The trials covered anticancer drugs used as monotherapy up to Sept. 18, 2020. Almost half were randomized trials, but only seven had placebo arms. Trials involving hematologic cancers outnumbered those involving solid tumors.

The 15 drugs examined were dacarbazine, abiraterone, clofarabine, azacitidine, ibrutinib, nilotinib, ponatinib, midostaurin, ipilimumab, aldesleukin, lenalidomide, pomalidomide, rituximab, bortezomib, and docetaxel.

The annualized incidence AFib rates per 100 person-years were 4.92 cases for ibrutinib, 2.38 cases for clofarabine, and 2.35 cases for ponatinib.

The lowest AFib rates were for ipilimumab (0.26 cases), rituximab (0.27), and nilotinib (0.29).

For placebo, the annualized rate was 0.25 cases per 100 person-years.

The team said caution is warranted regarding their estimations for clofarabine and midostaurin (0.65 cases) because no trials were registered after September 2009, when adverse event reporting became mandatory. As a result, estimates may be artificially low.

One of the limits of the study is that it focused on monotherapy in an age when combination treatment is generally the rule for cancer, the authors noted.

No external funding was reported for the study. Dr. Alexandre has received honoraria for presentations and consulting fees from Bayer, BMS, Pfizer, Amgen, and Bioserenity.
 

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Sections
Disallow All Ads
Content Gating
No Gating (article Unlocked/Free)
Alternative CME
Disqus Comments
Default
Use ProPublica
Hide sidebar & use full width
render the right sidebar.
Conference Recap Checkbox
Not Conference Recap
Clinical Edge
Display the Slideshow in this Article
Medscape Article
Display survey writer
Reuters content
Disable Inline Native ads
WebMD Article

Atorvastatin cut anthracycline cardiac dysfunction in lymphoma

Article Type
Changed
Tue, 03/07/2023 - 16:59

 

– Atorvastatin treatment of patients with lymphoma undergoing treatment with an anthracycline significantly cut the incidence of incident cardiac dysfunction by about two-thirds during 12 months of treatment, in a multicenter, randomized trial with 300 enrolled patients.

“These data support the use of atorvastatin among patients with lymphoma being treated with anthracyclines where prevention of cardiac systolic dysfunction is important,” concluded Tomas G. Neilan, MD, at the joint scientific sessions of the American College of Cardiology and the World Heart Federation.

Mitchel L. Zoler/MDedge News
Dr. Tomas G. Neilan

He highlighted that an important difference between the new study, STOP-CA, and a major prior study with a neutral effect published in 2022, was that STOP-CA “was powered for a major change” in cardiac function as the study’s primary outcome, a decline from baseline in left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) of at least 10% that also reduced ejection fraction to less than 55%.

“We can consider these medications [atorvastatin] for patients at higher risk for cardiac toxicity from anthracyclines, such as patients who receive a higher dose of an anthracycline, older patients, people with obesity, and women, commented Anita Deswal, MD, professor and chair of the department of cardiology at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, who was not involved with the study.
 

A basis for an ‘important discussion’ with patients

“For patients receiving higher doses of anthracyclines, the STOP-CA trial says that whether to start a statin for cardiac protection is now an important discussion” for these patients to have with their treating clinicians. ”That was not the case before today,” commented Ronald M. Witteles, MD, a cardiologist and professor who specializes in cardio-oncology at Stanford (Calif.) University.

“For a patient being treated for lymphoma or for another cancer and treated with equal or higher anthracycline doses, such as patients with a sarcoma, this trial’s results at the very least warrant a discussion between physicians and patients to make the decision,” Dr. Witteles, who was not involved in the study, said in an interview. But he also cautioned that “whether an individual patient should take a statin in this scenario is still not a no-brainer. While the trial was positive, it was for an imaging rather than for a clinical endpoint.”



Experts noted that a similar study with the clinical endpoint of heart failure would require both many more randomized patients as well as much longer follow-up. STOP-CA was not powered for this endpoint. During its 12-month duration, a total of 11 patients developed heart failure, with no between group difference.

STOP-CA enrolled adults with lymphoma (Hodgkin or non-Hodgkin) and scheduled to undergo anthracycline treatment at eight U.S. centers and one in Canada, and excluded patients already on statin treatment or those for whom a statin was already indicated. Of the 300 enrolled patients, 286 had 12-month follow-up. Randomization assigned patients to receive either 40 mg daily of atorvastatin or placebo.

Their cumulative, median anthracycline dose was 300 mg/m2, which is typical for treating lymphoma, but higher than the typical dose use for patients with breast cancer. At baseline, average LVEF was 63%, and after 12 months this had declined to 59%. Forty-six of the 286 patients assessed after 12 months fulfilled the primary outcome of at least a 10–percentage point reduction from baseline in their LVEF and a decline in LVEF to less than 55%. Researchers used cardiac MR to assess LVEF at baseline, and in most patients at follow-up, but a minority of patients had their follow-up assessments by echocardiography because of logistical issues. Greater than 90% of patients were adherent to their assigned regimen.

Tripled incidence of cardiac dysfunction in placebo patients

The incidence of this outcome was 9% among the patients who received atorvastatin, and 22% among those on placebo, a significant difference. The calculated odds of the primary outcome was 2.9-fold more likely among the patients treated with placebo, compared with those who received atorvastatin, also a significant difference.

The study’s secondary outcome was patients who had at least a 5% drop from baseline in their LVEF and with a LVEF of less than 55% after 12 months. This outcome occurred in 13% of patients treated with atorvastatin and in 29% of those who received placebo, a significant difference.

The atorvastatin and placebo arms showed no significant differences in adverse events during the study, with roughly similar incidence rates for muscle pain, elevated liver enzymes, and renal failure. None of the enrolled patients developed myositis.

Atorvastatin treatment also produced an expected average 37% decline from baseline in levels of LDL cholesterol.

“This was a well-designed and important trial,” said Dr. Witteles. “Anthracyclines remain a mainstay of cancer therapies for a number of malignancies, such as lymphoma and sarcoma, and the cardiac side effects of development of cardiac dysfunction are unequivocally real.”
 

The importance of a clinically meaningful effect

The results especially contrast with the findings from the PREVENT study, published in 2022, which compared a daily, 40-mg atorvastatin treatment with placebo in 279 randomized patients with breast cancer and treated for 24 months. However, patients in PREVENT had a cumulative, median anthracycline dose of 240 mg/m2, and the study’s primary outcome was the average change from baseline in LVEF after 24 months of treatment, which was a reduction of 0.08 percentage points in the placebo arm, a nonsignificant difference.

In STOP-CA, the average change in LVEF from baseline was a 1–percentage point reduction in the placebo arm, compared with the atorvastatin-treated patients, a difference that was statistically significant, but “not clinically significant,” said Dr. Neilan, director of the cardio-oncology program at Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston. He cited the good fortune of the STOP-CA investigators when they received a recommendation from reviewers early on to design their study to track a clinically meaningful change in LVEF rather than just looking at the average overall change.

Mitchel L. Zoler/MDedge News
Dr. Anita Deswal

Dr. Deswal also noted that it is unlikely that future studies will examine the efficacy of a statin for preventing LVEF in patients across the range of cancers that are eligible for anthracycline treatment. As a result, she predicted that “we may have to extrapolate” the results from STOP-CA to patients with other cancer types.

STOP-CA received no commercial funding. Dr. Neilan has been a consultant for and received fees from Abbvie, Amgen, Bristol-Myers Squibb, CRC Oncology, Genentech, Roche, and Sanofi, and has received grant funding from AstraZeneca and Bristol Myers Squib. Dr. Deswal and Dr. Witteles had no relevant disclosures.

Meeting/Event
Publications
Topics
Sections
Meeting/Event
Meeting/Event

 

– Atorvastatin treatment of patients with lymphoma undergoing treatment with an anthracycline significantly cut the incidence of incident cardiac dysfunction by about two-thirds during 12 months of treatment, in a multicenter, randomized trial with 300 enrolled patients.

“These data support the use of atorvastatin among patients with lymphoma being treated with anthracyclines where prevention of cardiac systolic dysfunction is important,” concluded Tomas G. Neilan, MD, at the joint scientific sessions of the American College of Cardiology and the World Heart Federation.

Mitchel L. Zoler/MDedge News
Dr. Tomas G. Neilan

He highlighted that an important difference between the new study, STOP-CA, and a major prior study with a neutral effect published in 2022, was that STOP-CA “was powered for a major change” in cardiac function as the study’s primary outcome, a decline from baseline in left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) of at least 10% that also reduced ejection fraction to less than 55%.

“We can consider these medications [atorvastatin] for patients at higher risk for cardiac toxicity from anthracyclines, such as patients who receive a higher dose of an anthracycline, older patients, people with obesity, and women, commented Anita Deswal, MD, professor and chair of the department of cardiology at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, who was not involved with the study.
 

A basis for an ‘important discussion’ with patients

“For patients receiving higher doses of anthracyclines, the STOP-CA trial says that whether to start a statin for cardiac protection is now an important discussion” for these patients to have with their treating clinicians. ”That was not the case before today,” commented Ronald M. Witteles, MD, a cardiologist and professor who specializes in cardio-oncology at Stanford (Calif.) University.

“For a patient being treated for lymphoma or for another cancer and treated with equal or higher anthracycline doses, such as patients with a sarcoma, this trial’s results at the very least warrant a discussion between physicians and patients to make the decision,” Dr. Witteles, who was not involved in the study, said in an interview. But he also cautioned that “whether an individual patient should take a statin in this scenario is still not a no-brainer. While the trial was positive, it was for an imaging rather than for a clinical endpoint.”



Experts noted that a similar study with the clinical endpoint of heart failure would require both many more randomized patients as well as much longer follow-up. STOP-CA was not powered for this endpoint. During its 12-month duration, a total of 11 patients developed heart failure, with no between group difference.

STOP-CA enrolled adults with lymphoma (Hodgkin or non-Hodgkin) and scheduled to undergo anthracycline treatment at eight U.S. centers and one in Canada, and excluded patients already on statin treatment or those for whom a statin was already indicated. Of the 300 enrolled patients, 286 had 12-month follow-up. Randomization assigned patients to receive either 40 mg daily of atorvastatin or placebo.

Their cumulative, median anthracycline dose was 300 mg/m2, which is typical for treating lymphoma, but higher than the typical dose use for patients with breast cancer. At baseline, average LVEF was 63%, and after 12 months this had declined to 59%. Forty-six of the 286 patients assessed after 12 months fulfilled the primary outcome of at least a 10–percentage point reduction from baseline in their LVEF and a decline in LVEF to less than 55%. Researchers used cardiac MR to assess LVEF at baseline, and in most patients at follow-up, but a minority of patients had their follow-up assessments by echocardiography because of logistical issues. Greater than 90% of patients were adherent to their assigned regimen.

Tripled incidence of cardiac dysfunction in placebo patients

The incidence of this outcome was 9% among the patients who received atorvastatin, and 22% among those on placebo, a significant difference. The calculated odds of the primary outcome was 2.9-fold more likely among the patients treated with placebo, compared with those who received atorvastatin, also a significant difference.

The study’s secondary outcome was patients who had at least a 5% drop from baseline in their LVEF and with a LVEF of less than 55% after 12 months. This outcome occurred in 13% of patients treated with atorvastatin and in 29% of those who received placebo, a significant difference.

The atorvastatin and placebo arms showed no significant differences in adverse events during the study, with roughly similar incidence rates for muscle pain, elevated liver enzymes, and renal failure. None of the enrolled patients developed myositis.

Atorvastatin treatment also produced an expected average 37% decline from baseline in levels of LDL cholesterol.

“This was a well-designed and important trial,” said Dr. Witteles. “Anthracyclines remain a mainstay of cancer therapies for a number of malignancies, such as lymphoma and sarcoma, and the cardiac side effects of development of cardiac dysfunction are unequivocally real.”
 

The importance of a clinically meaningful effect

The results especially contrast with the findings from the PREVENT study, published in 2022, which compared a daily, 40-mg atorvastatin treatment with placebo in 279 randomized patients with breast cancer and treated for 24 months. However, patients in PREVENT had a cumulative, median anthracycline dose of 240 mg/m2, and the study’s primary outcome was the average change from baseline in LVEF after 24 months of treatment, which was a reduction of 0.08 percentage points in the placebo arm, a nonsignificant difference.

In STOP-CA, the average change in LVEF from baseline was a 1–percentage point reduction in the placebo arm, compared with the atorvastatin-treated patients, a difference that was statistically significant, but “not clinically significant,” said Dr. Neilan, director of the cardio-oncology program at Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston. He cited the good fortune of the STOP-CA investigators when they received a recommendation from reviewers early on to design their study to track a clinically meaningful change in LVEF rather than just looking at the average overall change.

Mitchel L. Zoler/MDedge News
Dr. Anita Deswal

Dr. Deswal also noted that it is unlikely that future studies will examine the efficacy of a statin for preventing LVEF in patients across the range of cancers that are eligible for anthracycline treatment. As a result, she predicted that “we may have to extrapolate” the results from STOP-CA to patients with other cancer types.

STOP-CA received no commercial funding. Dr. Neilan has been a consultant for and received fees from Abbvie, Amgen, Bristol-Myers Squibb, CRC Oncology, Genentech, Roche, and Sanofi, and has received grant funding from AstraZeneca and Bristol Myers Squib. Dr. Deswal and Dr. Witteles had no relevant disclosures.

 

– Atorvastatin treatment of patients with lymphoma undergoing treatment with an anthracycline significantly cut the incidence of incident cardiac dysfunction by about two-thirds during 12 months of treatment, in a multicenter, randomized trial with 300 enrolled patients.

“These data support the use of atorvastatin among patients with lymphoma being treated with anthracyclines where prevention of cardiac systolic dysfunction is important,” concluded Tomas G. Neilan, MD, at the joint scientific sessions of the American College of Cardiology and the World Heart Federation.

Mitchel L. Zoler/MDedge News
Dr. Tomas G. Neilan

He highlighted that an important difference between the new study, STOP-CA, and a major prior study with a neutral effect published in 2022, was that STOP-CA “was powered for a major change” in cardiac function as the study’s primary outcome, a decline from baseline in left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) of at least 10% that also reduced ejection fraction to less than 55%.

“We can consider these medications [atorvastatin] for patients at higher risk for cardiac toxicity from anthracyclines, such as patients who receive a higher dose of an anthracycline, older patients, people with obesity, and women, commented Anita Deswal, MD, professor and chair of the department of cardiology at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, who was not involved with the study.
 

A basis for an ‘important discussion’ with patients

“For patients receiving higher doses of anthracyclines, the STOP-CA trial says that whether to start a statin for cardiac protection is now an important discussion” for these patients to have with their treating clinicians. ”That was not the case before today,” commented Ronald M. Witteles, MD, a cardiologist and professor who specializes in cardio-oncology at Stanford (Calif.) University.

“For a patient being treated for lymphoma or for another cancer and treated with equal or higher anthracycline doses, such as patients with a sarcoma, this trial’s results at the very least warrant a discussion between physicians and patients to make the decision,” Dr. Witteles, who was not involved in the study, said in an interview. But he also cautioned that “whether an individual patient should take a statin in this scenario is still not a no-brainer. While the trial was positive, it was for an imaging rather than for a clinical endpoint.”



Experts noted that a similar study with the clinical endpoint of heart failure would require both many more randomized patients as well as much longer follow-up. STOP-CA was not powered for this endpoint. During its 12-month duration, a total of 11 patients developed heart failure, with no between group difference.

STOP-CA enrolled adults with lymphoma (Hodgkin or non-Hodgkin) and scheduled to undergo anthracycline treatment at eight U.S. centers and one in Canada, and excluded patients already on statin treatment or those for whom a statin was already indicated. Of the 300 enrolled patients, 286 had 12-month follow-up. Randomization assigned patients to receive either 40 mg daily of atorvastatin or placebo.

Their cumulative, median anthracycline dose was 300 mg/m2, which is typical for treating lymphoma, but higher than the typical dose use for patients with breast cancer. At baseline, average LVEF was 63%, and after 12 months this had declined to 59%. Forty-six of the 286 patients assessed after 12 months fulfilled the primary outcome of at least a 10–percentage point reduction from baseline in their LVEF and a decline in LVEF to less than 55%. Researchers used cardiac MR to assess LVEF at baseline, and in most patients at follow-up, but a minority of patients had their follow-up assessments by echocardiography because of logistical issues. Greater than 90% of patients were adherent to their assigned regimen.

Tripled incidence of cardiac dysfunction in placebo patients

The incidence of this outcome was 9% among the patients who received atorvastatin, and 22% among those on placebo, a significant difference. The calculated odds of the primary outcome was 2.9-fold more likely among the patients treated with placebo, compared with those who received atorvastatin, also a significant difference.

The study’s secondary outcome was patients who had at least a 5% drop from baseline in their LVEF and with a LVEF of less than 55% after 12 months. This outcome occurred in 13% of patients treated with atorvastatin and in 29% of those who received placebo, a significant difference.

The atorvastatin and placebo arms showed no significant differences in adverse events during the study, with roughly similar incidence rates for muscle pain, elevated liver enzymes, and renal failure. None of the enrolled patients developed myositis.

Atorvastatin treatment also produced an expected average 37% decline from baseline in levels of LDL cholesterol.

“This was a well-designed and important trial,” said Dr. Witteles. “Anthracyclines remain a mainstay of cancer therapies for a number of malignancies, such as lymphoma and sarcoma, and the cardiac side effects of development of cardiac dysfunction are unequivocally real.”
 

The importance of a clinically meaningful effect

The results especially contrast with the findings from the PREVENT study, published in 2022, which compared a daily, 40-mg atorvastatin treatment with placebo in 279 randomized patients with breast cancer and treated for 24 months. However, patients in PREVENT had a cumulative, median anthracycline dose of 240 mg/m2, and the study’s primary outcome was the average change from baseline in LVEF after 24 months of treatment, which was a reduction of 0.08 percentage points in the placebo arm, a nonsignificant difference.

In STOP-CA, the average change in LVEF from baseline was a 1–percentage point reduction in the placebo arm, compared with the atorvastatin-treated patients, a difference that was statistically significant, but “not clinically significant,” said Dr. Neilan, director of the cardio-oncology program at Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston. He cited the good fortune of the STOP-CA investigators when they received a recommendation from reviewers early on to design their study to track a clinically meaningful change in LVEF rather than just looking at the average overall change.

Mitchel L. Zoler/MDedge News
Dr. Anita Deswal

Dr. Deswal also noted that it is unlikely that future studies will examine the efficacy of a statin for preventing LVEF in patients across the range of cancers that are eligible for anthracycline treatment. As a result, she predicted that “we may have to extrapolate” the results from STOP-CA to patients with other cancer types.

STOP-CA received no commercial funding. Dr. Neilan has been a consultant for and received fees from Abbvie, Amgen, Bristol-Myers Squibb, CRC Oncology, Genentech, Roche, and Sanofi, and has received grant funding from AstraZeneca and Bristol Myers Squib. Dr. Deswal and Dr. Witteles had no relevant disclosures.

Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Sections
Article Source

AT ACC 2023

Disallow All Ads
Content Gating
No Gating (article Unlocked/Free)
Alternative CME
Disqus Comments
Default
Use ProPublica
Hide sidebar & use full width
render the right sidebar.
Conference Recap Checkbox
Not Conference Recap
Clinical Edge
Display the Slideshow in this Article
Medscape Article
Display survey writer
Reuters content
Disable Inline Native ads
WebMD Article

Cancer clinics begin to accommodate patients demanding new cancer detection tests

Article Type
Changed
Wed, 01/18/2023 - 17:37

Doug Flora, MD, knows the value of early cancer detection because it helped him survive kidney cancer 5 years ago. But as a medical oncologist and hematologist, and the executive medical director of oncology services at St. Elizabeth Healthcare in Edgewood, Ky., he also knows that a new era of early cancer detection testing poses big challenges for his network of six hospitals and 169 specialty and primary care offices throughout Kentucky, Ohio, and Indiana.

Multicancer early detection (MCED) tests are finally a reality and could be a potential game changer because they can screen for the possibility of up to 50 different cancers in asymptomatic individuals with one blood draw. They represent one of the fastest growing segments in medical diagnostics with a projected value of $2.77 billion by 2030, according to the market research firm Grand View Research.

These tests are different from traditional liquid biopsies, which are designed to identify actionable gene mutations to help inform treatment decisions of patients already diagnosed with cancer. Instead, MCED tests work to detect fragments of circulating free DNA that have been shed by tumors and released into the bloodstream. Detecting these cancer signals could indicate that an individual has cancer well before they ever develop symptoms.

For some cancer types, particularly those commonly diagnosed at advanced stages or those without general population screening tests, MCED testing could have a significant impact.

In its new report, Grand View Research highlights nine “prominent players” active in the MCED market; of these, two have been granted breakthrough device designation by the Food and Drug Administration: OverC MCDBT by Burning Rock on Jan. 3, 2023, and Galleri by Grail in 2019. Galleri was launched in June 2021 and can be obtained with a prescription at a cost of $949.

Yet, while patients are asking for these tests and primary care physicians are prescribing them, oncologists are grappling with how to manage the first patients whose tests tell them they may have cancer.

Ordering the tests may seem straightforward, but in reality, it is not. In fact, they are so new that most health systems have no internal guidelines for physicians. Guidelines would address when the tests should be prescribed, and whether a patient should undergo more testing or be referred to an oncologist.
 

Clinical trials underway

There are currently at least 17 clinical trials underway to investigate the performance and clinical utility of MCED tests. Six of these involve Grail, including NHS-Galleri, the largest study to date of 140,000 participants in the United Kingdom where participants will be followed for 3 years with annual visits at 12 and 24 months. And, the National Cancer Institute is spearheading a clinical trial of its own, according to a search of ClinicalTrials.gov.

In September 2022, Grail presented findings from its pivotal PATHFINDER study at the annual meeting of the European Society of Medical Oncology. Researchers reported that cancer signals were detected in 1.4% (92) of 6,621 participants enrolled in the study. Of the 92, 35 people were diagnosed with 36 cancers: 19 were solid tumors (2 oropharyngeal, 5 breast, l liver, 1 intrahepatic bile duct, 2 colon/rectum, 2 prostate, 1 lung, 1 pancreas, 1 small intestine, 1 uterus, 1 ovary and 1 bone) and 17 hematologic cancers (1 plasma cell myeloma/disorders, 2 lymphoid leukemia, 2 Waldenström’s macroglobulinemia, and 12 lymphoma).

Almost half of newly diagnosed cases were cancers in stage 1 or 2. Of stage 1 cancers, three were solid tumors and four were hematologic cancers. Of stage 2 cancers, three were solid tumors and four were hematologic cancers. All other cancers were in stage 3 and 4 or were listed as recurrent or no stage. Deb Schrag, MD, MPH, chair of the department of medicine at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York, who presented the results from PATHFINDER at ESMO, reported that, of all diagnosed cancers, only breast, colon/rectum, prostate, and lung have established screening protocols.

The findings were so striking that the meeting scientific co-chair, Fabrice André, MD, PhD, told ESMO the oncology field must prepare for an onslaught of new patients.

“Within the next 5 years, we will need more doctors, surgeons and nurses with more diagnostic and treatment infrastructures to care for the rising number of people who will be identified by multicancer early detection tests,” said Dr. André, who is director of research at Gustave Roussy Cancer Center, Villejuif, France, and future president of ESMO (2025-2026). “We need to involve all stakeholders in deciding new pathways of care. We need to agree who will be tested and when and where tests will be carried out, and to anticipate the changes that will happen as a result of these tests.”

But first, he urged, the need for comparative trials “across all types of cancer to find out if having an early detection test affects morbidity and mortality. We also need to know how the tests benefit patients, and how to discuss the results with them,” Dr. André said.
 

 

 

Demand may burden health systems

Dr. Flora suggested that companies like Grail are rushing their product to market without conducting long-term sizable clinical trials.

“These diagnostic companies are a billion dollar publicly traded or venture capital-funded companies that are losing millions of dollars a quarter as they’re scaling up these tests. So, there is some pressure on the sales forces ... to start moving product long before the science has met our lowest areas for entry,” Dr. Flora said. “They are aggressively marketing to a primary care audience that knows nothing about MCEDs. It’s a sales-driven development solving a problem we all believe is real, but we don’t know if it actually solves the problem.”

There are many unanswered questions, he said. Among these include whether the tests do indeed extend survival. “What they’re suggesting – that is if the blood test detects it – that we’re going to save your life. That’s not yet been proven. This is where the providers are pushing back against these industry types to say: ‘This is the wild west right now.’ It’s very irresponsible to go out there and try to sell hundreds of millions of dollars of product to doctors who have never studied genetics,” Dr. Flora said.

Grail’s chief medical officer Jeff Venstrom, MD, however, said physicians don’t need a background in genetic testing to order or interpret Galleri because it’s not a genetic test. Genetic tests look for genetic variants associated with cancer risk, which Galleri does not. MCED tests rely on genomic profiling to identify alterations in tumors.

“Maybe there’s still confusion in the market, which is common for new technologies when they’re initially launched. This is not a 23andMe test. We do not report germline mutations that have implications for cancer risk. We’re using this blood sample to test for the presence or absence of a cancer signal. The test result is very clear and simple: One area of the report says ‘yes’ or ‘no.’ It is a binary result that says if a signal is detected or not. The second provides additional information around where that signal could be coming from,” he said.

Galleri could fill a huge unmet need in cancer prevention, Dr. Venstrom said. Not only could it detect cancer at an earlier stage, but it could serve as a screening tool for cancers like pancreatic cancer in which screening is not available.

The test is not intended to replace standard of care screening, he said. The ordering provider should have a conversation with the patient about overall cancer risk. “Are you smoking? What’s your risk of obesity-associated cancers? Do you have a family history of cancer? I think this should all be in the context of a good conversation around preventative care,” he said.
 

Planning and prep in Boston

In Boston, Aparna Parikh, MD, an oncologist who specializes in gastrointestinal cancers, agreed that MCED testing has forced her team at the Mass General Cancer Center global cancer care program to think outside of the box.

“We’re a major academic center and it’s not easy [because] this is all uncharted territory,” she said. “We all recognize there are more tests coming, and they are here to stay. As a health system, we have to be ready to manage not only the tests, but patient anxieties, and all the complexities that come with it. We just don’t know yet how to best navigate.”

Although Dr. Parikh’s center has set up a working group tasked with organizing an outpatient clinic for patients with positive MCED tests, the current system is haphazard.

“Right now, it gets bounced around between people,” she explained. “Sometimes, patients are getting referred to the oncology team rather than the primary care team to try to sort out where the cancer signal is coming from, that is, if it’s not immediately obvious. No one really knows who should be the right person to own it,” Dr. Parikh said. While the test is supposed to give tissue-specific results, “it’s not perfect” and sometimes imaging and other work-ups are needed to locate the source of the signa.

“A group of four or five oncologists get looped in and then we’re trying to sort it out on a case-by-case basis, but understanding that with more and more tests coming, that kind of ad hoc approach isn’t going to be sufficient. We need a happy medium between the primary care and the disease specific oncologist, someone who can kind of help think through the diagnostic workup until they have a cancer diagnosis to get them to the right place,” Dr. Parikh said.

Dr. Venstrom said Grail is committed to providing support to clinicians in these situations. “We’re doing everything we can with our medical education forums. We have this pretty intense and extensive postpositive suite of resources,” he explained. “Some of our doctors on staff call the ordering provider within 24 hours just to clarify if there are any questions or confusion from the report. For example, if it suggests the signal is coming from the lung, we provide additional support around additional workups.”
 

Out-of-pocket test may widen disparities in care

With the exception of a few health insurance companies that have committed to covering some of the cost for the test, Galleri is an out-of-pocket expense.

Dr. Venstrom acknowledged that broad insurance coverage for the Galleri test remains a hurdle, although “we’ve secured coverage for a handful of companies of self-insured employers and forward-thinking insurers.” This includes partnerships with Point32Health, and Alignment Health, among others, he said.

There is also growing support among more than 400 cancer organizations for the Multi-Cancer Early Detection Screening Coverage Act to accelerate coverage for Medicare beneficiaries. “We are constantly trying to understand the evidence that’s needed for payors to make sure that we get the broadest access possible for this test,” he said.
 

The first positive test result

Back at St. Elizabeth Healthcare where they’ve only seen one positive MCED test result thus far, Dr. Flora is more concerned about patients giving informed consent before they even get the test. “When the reps started hammering our primary care doctors, we sent communiques throughout the system saying that we would very much like to regulate this to make sure that before our patients receive accidental harm, that they at least have a conversation with somebody who understands the test,” he explained.

All 15 patients who requested the test at the hospital were first required to discuss the implications with a genetic counselor who is part of the system. “We are really pro–cancer screening,” he said, but added his hospital is “not pumped” about the Galleri test. “We’re being very cautious about overstatements made by sales guys to our primary care doctors, so we’re letting our own precision medicine people handle it.”

There’s a similar system in place at Community Health Network, a nonprofit health system with nine hospitals and 1,300 employee providers throughout Central Indiana. Patrick McGill, MD, a primary care physician and chief analytics officer for the network says they have streamlined patients with positive tests through their high-risk oncology clinic. “They don’t go straight to a medical oncologist which I know some systems are struggling with,” he said. “They get additional testing, whether it’s imaging they might need or other lab testing. We’ve had a few lung positives, and a few leukemia positives which might go straight to medical oncology. I think we had one breast that was positive so she got additional breast imaging.”

Through its foundation, CHN will offer 2,000 tests free of charge. “We decided to take cost off the table with this funding,” Dr. McGill said. “A lot of health systems I talk to are always concerned that insurance doesn’t cover it and it’s cost prohibitive. Is it creating additional disparities because only people who can afford it can get the test?”

Dr. Schrag serves as an uncompensated advisor for Grail. Previously, while with the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, she received research funding from Grail.

Publications
Topics
Sections

Doug Flora, MD, knows the value of early cancer detection because it helped him survive kidney cancer 5 years ago. But as a medical oncologist and hematologist, and the executive medical director of oncology services at St. Elizabeth Healthcare in Edgewood, Ky., he also knows that a new era of early cancer detection testing poses big challenges for his network of six hospitals and 169 specialty and primary care offices throughout Kentucky, Ohio, and Indiana.

Multicancer early detection (MCED) tests are finally a reality and could be a potential game changer because they can screen for the possibility of up to 50 different cancers in asymptomatic individuals with one blood draw. They represent one of the fastest growing segments in medical diagnostics with a projected value of $2.77 billion by 2030, according to the market research firm Grand View Research.

These tests are different from traditional liquid biopsies, which are designed to identify actionable gene mutations to help inform treatment decisions of patients already diagnosed with cancer. Instead, MCED tests work to detect fragments of circulating free DNA that have been shed by tumors and released into the bloodstream. Detecting these cancer signals could indicate that an individual has cancer well before they ever develop symptoms.

For some cancer types, particularly those commonly diagnosed at advanced stages or those without general population screening tests, MCED testing could have a significant impact.

In its new report, Grand View Research highlights nine “prominent players” active in the MCED market; of these, two have been granted breakthrough device designation by the Food and Drug Administration: OverC MCDBT by Burning Rock on Jan. 3, 2023, and Galleri by Grail in 2019. Galleri was launched in June 2021 and can be obtained with a prescription at a cost of $949.

Yet, while patients are asking for these tests and primary care physicians are prescribing them, oncologists are grappling with how to manage the first patients whose tests tell them they may have cancer.

Ordering the tests may seem straightforward, but in reality, it is not. In fact, they are so new that most health systems have no internal guidelines for physicians. Guidelines would address when the tests should be prescribed, and whether a patient should undergo more testing or be referred to an oncologist.
 

Clinical trials underway

There are currently at least 17 clinical trials underway to investigate the performance and clinical utility of MCED tests. Six of these involve Grail, including NHS-Galleri, the largest study to date of 140,000 participants in the United Kingdom where participants will be followed for 3 years with annual visits at 12 and 24 months. And, the National Cancer Institute is spearheading a clinical trial of its own, according to a search of ClinicalTrials.gov.

In September 2022, Grail presented findings from its pivotal PATHFINDER study at the annual meeting of the European Society of Medical Oncology. Researchers reported that cancer signals were detected in 1.4% (92) of 6,621 participants enrolled in the study. Of the 92, 35 people were diagnosed with 36 cancers: 19 were solid tumors (2 oropharyngeal, 5 breast, l liver, 1 intrahepatic bile duct, 2 colon/rectum, 2 prostate, 1 lung, 1 pancreas, 1 small intestine, 1 uterus, 1 ovary and 1 bone) and 17 hematologic cancers (1 plasma cell myeloma/disorders, 2 lymphoid leukemia, 2 Waldenström’s macroglobulinemia, and 12 lymphoma).

Almost half of newly diagnosed cases were cancers in stage 1 or 2. Of stage 1 cancers, three were solid tumors and four were hematologic cancers. Of stage 2 cancers, three were solid tumors and four were hematologic cancers. All other cancers were in stage 3 and 4 or were listed as recurrent or no stage. Deb Schrag, MD, MPH, chair of the department of medicine at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York, who presented the results from PATHFINDER at ESMO, reported that, of all diagnosed cancers, only breast, colon/rectum, prostate, and lung have established screening protocols.

The findings were so striking that the meeting scientific co-chair, Fabrice André, MD, PhD, told ESMO the oncology field must prepare for an onslaught of new patients.

“Within the next 5 years, we will need more doctors, surgeons and nurses with more diagnostic and treatment infrastructures to care for the rising number of people who will be identified by multicancer early detection tests,” said Dr. André, who is director of research at Gustave Roussy Cancer Center, Villejuif, France, and future president of ESMO (2025-2026). “We need to involve all stakeholders in deciding new pathways of care. We need to agree who will be tested and when and where tests will be carried out, and to anticipate the changes that will happen as a result of these tests.”

But first, he urged, the need for comparative trials “across all types of cancer to find out if having an early detection test affects morbidity and mortality. We also need to know how the tests benefit patients, and how to discuss the results with them,” Dr. André said.
 

 

 

Demand may burden health systems

Dr. Flora suggested that companies like Grail are rushing their product to market without conducting long-term sizable clinical trials.

“These diagnostic companies are a billion dollar publicly traded or venture capital-funded companies that are losing millions of dollars a quarter as they’re scaling up these tests. So, there is some pressure on the sales forces ... to start moving product long before the science has met our lowest areas for entry,” Dr. Flora said. “They are aggressively marketing to a primary care audience that knows nothing about MCEDs. It’s a sales-driven development solving a problem we all believe is real, but we don’t know if it actually solves the problem.”

There are many unanswered questions, he said. Among these include whether the tests do indeed extend survival. “What they’re suggesting – that is if the blood test detects it – that we’re going to save your life. That’s not yet been proven. This is where the providers are pushing back against these industry types to say: ‘This is the wild west right now.’ It’s very irresponsible to go out there and try to sell hundreds of millions of dollars of product to doctors who have never studied genetics,” Dr. Flora said.

Grail’s chief medical officer Jeff Venstrom, MD, however, said physicians don’t need a background in genetic testing to order or interpret Galleri because it’s not a genetic test. Genetic tests look for genetic variants associated with cancer risk, which Galleri does not. MCED tests rely on genomic profiling to identify alterations in tumors.

“Maybe there’s still confusion in the market, which is common for new technologies when they’re initially launched. This is not a 23andMe test. We do not report germline mutations that have implications for cancer risk. We’re using this blood sample to test for the presence or absence of a cancer signal. The test result is very clear and simple: One area of the report says ‘yes’ or ‘no.’ It is a binary result that says if a signal is detected or not. The second provides additional information around where that signal could be coming from,” he said.

Galleri could fill a huge unmet need in cancer prevention, Dr. Venstrom said. Not only could it detect cancer at an earlier stage, but it could serve as a screening tool for cancers like pancreatic cancer in which screening is not available.

The test is not intended to replace standard of care screening, he said. The ordering provider should have a conversation with the patient about overall cancer risk. “Are you smoking? What’s your risk of obesity-associated cancers? Do you have a family history of cancer? I think this should all be in the context of a good conversation around preventative care,” he said.
 

Planning and prep in Boston

In Boston, Aparna Parikh, MD, an oncologist who specializes in gastrointestinal cancers, agreed that MCED testing has forced her team at the Mass General Cancer Center global cancer care program to think outside of the box.

“We’re a major academic center and it’s not easy [because] this is all uncharted territory,” she said. “We all recognize there are more tests coming, and they are here to stay. As a health system, we have to be ready to manage not only the tests, but patient anxieties, and all the complexities that come with it. We just don’t know yet how to best navigate.”

Although Dr. Parikh’s center has set up a working group tasked with organizing an outpatient clinic for patients with positive MCED tests, the current system is haphazard.

“Right now, it gets bounced around between people,” she explained. “Sometimes, patients are getting referred to the oncology team rather than the primary care team to try to sort out where the cancer signal is coming from, that is, if it’s not immediately obvious. No one really knows who should be the right person to own it,” Dr. Parikh said. While the test is supposed to give tissue-specific results, “it’s not perfect” and sometimes imaging and other work-ups are needed to locate the source of the signa.

“A group of four or five oncologists get looped in and then we’re trying to sort it out on a case-by-case basis, but understanding that with more and more tests coming, that kind of ad hoc approach isn’t going to be sufficient. We need a happy medium between the primary care and the disease specific oncologist, someone who can kind of help think through the diagnostic workup until they have a cancer diagnosis to get them to the right place,” Dr. Parikh said.

Dr. Venstrom said Grail is committed to providing support to clinicians in these situations. “We’re doing everything we can with our medical education forums. We have this pretty intense and extensive postpositive suite of resources,” he explained. “Some of our doctors on staff call the ordering provider within 24 hours just to clarify if there are any questions or confusion from the report. For example, if it suggests the signal is coming from the lung, we provide additional support around additional workups.”
 

Out-of-pocket test may widen disparities in care

With the exception of a few health insurance companies that have committed to covering some of the cost for the test, Galleri is an out-of-pocket expense.

Dr. Venstrom acknowledged that broad insurance coverage for the Galleri test remains a hurdle, although “we’ve secured coverage for a handful of companies of self-insured employers and forward-thinking insurers.” This includes partnerships with Point32Health, and Alignment Health, among others, he said.

There is also growing support among more than 400 cancer organizations for the Multi-Cancer Early Detection Screening Coverage Act to accelerate coverage for Medicare beneficiaries. “We are constantly trying to understand the evidence that’s needed for payors to make sure that we get the broadest access possible for this test,” he said.
 

The first positive test result

Back at St. Elizabeth Healthcare where they’ve only seen one positive MCED test result thus far, Dr. Flora is more concerned about patients giving informed consent before they even get the test. “When the reps started hammering our primary care doctors, we sent communiques throughout the system saying that we would very much like to regulate this to make sure that before our patients receive accidental harm, that they at least have a conversation with somebody who understands the test,” he explained.

All 15 patients who requested the test at the hospital were first required to discuss the implications with a genetic counselor who is part of the system. “We are really pro–cancer screening,” he said, but added his hospital is “not pumped” about the Galleri test. “We’re being very cautious about overstatements made by sales guys to our primary care doctors, so we’re letting our own precision medicine people handle it.”

There’s a similar system in place at Community Health Network, a nonprofit health system with nine hospitals and 1,300 employee providers throughout Central Indiana. Patrick McGill, MD, a primary care physician and chief analytics officer for the network says they have streamlined patients with positive tests through their high-risk oncology clinic. “They don’t go straight to a medical oncologist which I know some systems are struggling with,” he said. “They get additional testing, whether it’s imaging they might need or other lab testing. We’ve had a few lung positives, and a few leukemia positives which might go straight to medical oncology. I think we had one breast that was positive so she got additional breast imaging.”

Through its foundation, CHN will offer 2,000 tests free of charge. “We decided to take cost off the table with this funding,” Dr. McGill said. “A lot of health systems I talk to are always concerned that insurance doesn’t cover it and it’s cost prohibitive. Is it creating additional disparities because only people who can afford it can get the test?”

Dr. Schrag serves as an uncompensated advisor for Grail. Previously, while with the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, she received research funding from Grail.

Doug Flora, MD, knows the value of early cancer detection because it helped him survive kidney cancer 5 years ago. But as a medical oncologist and hematologist, and the executive medical director of oncology services at St. Elizabeth Healthcare in Edgewood, Ky., he also knows that a new era of early cancer detection testing poses big challenges for his network of six hospitals and 169 specialty and primary care offices throughout Kentucky, Ohio, and Indiana.

Multicancer early detection (MCED) tests are finally a reality and could be a potential game changer because they can screen for the possibility of up to 50 different cancers in asymptomatic individuals with one blood draw. They represent one of the fastest growing segments in medical diagnostics with a projected value of $2.77 billion by 2030, according to the market research firm Grand View Research.

These tests are different from traditional liquid biopsies, which are designed to identify actionable gene mutations to help inform treatment decisions of patients already diagnosed with cancer. Instead, MCED tests work to detect fragments of circulating free DNA that have been shed by tumors and released into the bloodstream. Detecting these cancer signals could indicate that an individual has cancer well before they ever develop symptoms.

For some cancer types, particularly those commonly diagnosed at advanced stages or those without general population screening tests, MCED testing could have a significant impact.

In its new report, Grand View Research highlights nine “prominent players” active in the MCED market; of these, two have been granted breakthrough device designation by the Food and Drug Administration: OverC MCDBT by Burning Rock on Jan. 3, 2023, and Galleri by Grail in 2019. Galleri was launched in June 2021 and can be obtained with a prescription at a cost of $949.

Yet, while patients are asking for these tests and primary care physicians are prescribing them, oncologists are grappling with how to manage the first patients whose tests tell them they may have cancer.

Ordering the tests may seem straightforward, but in reality, it is not. In fact, they are so new that most health systems have no internal guidelines for physicians. Guidelines would address when the tests should be prescribed, and whether a patient should undergo more testing or be referred to an oncologist.
 

Clinical trials underway

There are currently at least 17 clinical trials underway to investigate the performance and clinical utility of MCED tests. Six of these involve Grail, including NHS-Galleri, the largest study to date of 140,000 participants in the United Kingdom where participants will be followed for 3 years with annual visits at 12 and 24 months. And, the National Cancer Institute is spearheading a clinical trial of its own, according to a search of ClinicalTrials.gov.

In September 2022, Grail presented findings from its pivotal PATHFINDER study at the annual meeting of the European Society of Medical Oncology. Researchers reported that cancer signals were detected in 1.4% (92) of 6,621 participants enrolled in the study. Of the 92, 35 people were diagnosed with 36 cancers: 19 were solid tumors (2 oropharyngeal, 5 breast, l liver, 1 intrahepatic bile duct, 2 colon/rectum, 2 prostate, 1 lung, 1 pancreas, 1 small intestine, 1 uterus, 1 ovary and 1 bone) and 17 hematologic cancers (1 plasma cell myeloma/disorders, 2 lymphoid leukemia, 2 Waldenström’s macroglobulinemia, and 12 lymphoma).

Almost half of newly diagnosed cases were cancers in stage 1 or 2. Of stage 1 cancers, three were solid tumors and four were hematologic cancers. Of stage 2 cancers, three were solid tumors and four were hematologic cancers. All other cancers were in stage 3 and 4 or were listed as recurrent or no stage. Deb Schrag, MD, MPH, chair of the department of medicine at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York, who presented the results from PATHFINDER at ESMO, reported that, of all diagnosed cancers, only breast, colon/rectum, prostate, and lung have established screening protocols.

The findings were so striking that the meeting scientific co-chair, Fabrice André, MD, PhD, told ESMO the oncology field must prepare for an onslaught of new patients.

“Within the next 5 years, we will need more doctors, surgeons and nurses with more diagnostic and treatment infrastructures to care for the rising number of people who will be identified by multicancer early detection tests,” said Dr. André, who is director of research at Gustave Roussy Cancer Center, Villejuif, France, and future president of ESMO (2025-2026). “We need to involve all stakeholders in deciding new pathways of care. We need to agree who will be tested and when and where tests will be carried out, and to anticipate the changes that will happen as a result of these tests.”

But first, he urged, the need for comparative trials “across all types of cancer to find out if having an early detection test affects morbidity and mortality. We also need to know how the tests benefit patients, and how to discuss the results with them,” Dr. André said.
 

 

 

Demand may burden health systems

Dr. Flora suggested that companies like Grail are rushing their product to market without conducting long-term sizable clinical trials.

“These diagnostic companies are a billion dollar publicly traded or venture capital-funded companies that are losing millions of dollars a quarter as they’re scaling up these tests. So, there is some pressure on the sales forces ... to start moving product long before the science has met our lowest areas for entry,” Dr. Flora said. “They are aggressively marketing to a primary care audience that knows nothing about MCEDs. It’s a sales-driven development solving a problem we all believe is real, but we don’t know if it actually solves the problem.”

There are many unanswered questions, he said. Among these include whether the tests do indeed extend survival. “What they’re suggesting – that is if the blood test detects it – that we’re going to save your life. That’s not yet been proven. This is where the providers are pushing back against these industry types to say: ‘This is the wild west right now.’ It’s very irresponsible to go out there and try to sell hundreds of millions of dollars of product to doctors who have never studied genetics,” Dr. Flora said.

Grail’s chief medical officer Jeff Venstrom, MD, however, said physicians don’t need a background in genetic testing to order or interpret Galleri because it’s not a genetic test. Genetic tests look for genetic variants associated with cancer risk, which Galleri does not. MCED tests rely on genomic profiling to identify alterations in tumors.

“Maybe there’s still confusion in the market, which is common for new technologies when they’re initially launched. This is not a 23andMe test. We do not report germline mutations that have implications for cancer risk. We’re using this blood sample to test for the presence or absence of a cancer signal. The test result is very clear and simple: One area of the report says ‘yes’ or ‘no.’ It is a binary result that says if a signal is detected or not. The second provides additional information around where that signal could be coming from,” he said.

Galleri could fill a huge unmet need in cancer prevention, Dr. Venstrom said. Not only could it detect cancer at an earlier stage, but it could serve as a screening tool for cancers like pancreatic cancer in which screening is not available.

The test is not intended to replace standard of care screening, he said. The ordering provider should have a conversation with the patient about overall cancer risk. “Are you smoking? What’s your risk of obesity-associated cancers? Do you have a family history of cancer? I think this should all be in the context of a good conversation around preventative care,” he said.
 

Planning and prep in Boston

In Boston, Aparna Parikh, MD, an oncologist who specializes in gastrointestinal cancers, agreed that MCED testing has forced her team at the Mass General Cancer Center global cancer care program to think outside of the box.

“We’re a major academic center and it’s not easy [because] this is all uncharted territory,” she said. “We all recognize there are more tests coming, and they are here to stay. As a health system, we have to be ready to manage not only the tests, but patient anxieties, and all the complexities that come with it. We just don’t know yet how to best navigate.”

Although Dr. Parikh’s center has set up a working group tasked with organizing an outpatient clinic for patients with positive MCED tests, the current system is haphazard.

“Right now, it gets bounced around between people,” she explained. “Sometimes, patients are getting referred to the oncology team rather than the primary care team to try to sort out where the cancer signal is coming from, that is, if it’s not immediately obvious. No one really knows who should be the right person to own it,” Dr. Parikh said. While the test is supposed to give tissue-specific results, “it’s not perfect” and sometimes imaging and other work-ups are needed to locate the source of the signa.

“A group of four or five oncologists get looped in and then we’re trying to sort it out on a case-by-case basis, but understanding that with more and more tests coming, that kind of ad hoc approach isn’t going to be sufficient. We need a happy medium between the primary care and the disease specific oncologist, someone who can kind of help think through the diagnostic workup until they have a cancer diagnosis to get them to the right place,” Dr. Parikh said.

Dr. Venstrom said Grail is committed to providing support to clinicians in these situations. “We’re doing everything we can with our medical education forums. We have this pretty intense and extensive postpositive suite of resources,” he explained. “Some of our doctors on staff call the ordering provider within 24 hours just to clarify if there are any questions or confusion from the report. For example, if it suggests the signal is coming from the lung, we provide additional support around additional workups.”
 

Out-of-pocket test may widen disparities in care

With the exception of a few health insurance companies that have committed to covering some of the cost for the test, Galleri is an out-of-pocket expense.

Dr. Venstrom acknowledged that broad insurance coverage for the Galleri test remains a hurdle, although “we’ve secured coverage for a handful of companies of self-insured employers and forward-thinking insurers.” This includes partnerships with Point32Health, and Alignment Health, among others, he said.

There is also growing support among more than 400 cancer organizations for the Multi-Cancer Early Detection Screening Coverage Act to accelerate coverage for Medicare beneficiaries. “We are constantly trying to understand the evidence that’s needed for payors to make sure that we get the broadest access possible for this test,” he said.
 

The first positive test result

Back at St. Elizabeth Healthcare where they’ve only seen one positive MCED test result thus far, Dr. Flora is more concerned about patients giving informed consent before they even get the test. “When the reps started hammering our primary care doctors, we sent communiques throughout the system saying that we would very much like to regulate this to make sure that before our patients receive accidental harm, that they at least have a conversation with somebody who understands the test,” he explained.

All 15 patients who requested the test at the hospital were first required to discuss the implications with a genetic counselor who is part of the system. “We are really pro–cancer screening,” he said, but added his hospital is “not pumped” about the Galleri test. “We’re being very cautious about overstatements made by sales guys to our primary care doctors, so we’re letting our own precision medicine people handle it.”

There’s a similar system in place at Community Health Network, a nonprofit health system with nine hospitals and 1,300 employee providers throughout Central Indiana. Patrick McGill, MD, a primary care physician and chief analytics officer for the network says they have streamlined patients with positive tests through their high-risk oncology clinic. “They don’t go straight to a medical oncologist which I know some systems are struggling with,” he said. “They get additional testing, whether it’s imaging they might need or other lab testing. We’ve had a few lung positives, and a few leukemia positives which might go straight to medical oncology. I think we had one breast that was positive so she got additional breast imaging.”

Through its foundation, CHN will offer 2,000 tests free of charge. “We decided to take cost off the table with this funding,” Dr. McGill said. “A lot of health systems I talk to are always concerned that insurance doesn’t cover it and it’s cost prohibitive. Is it creating additional disparities because only people who can afford it can get the test?”

Dr. Schrag serves as an uncompensated advisor for Grail. Previously, while with the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, she received research funding from Grail.

Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Sections
Disallow All Ads
Content Gating
No Gating (article Unlocked/Free)
Alternative CME
Disqus Comments
Default
Use ProPublica
Hide sidebar & use full width
render the right sidebar.
Conference Recap Checkbox
Not Conference Recap
Clinical Edge
Display the Slideshow in this Article
Medscape Article
Display survey writer
Reuters content
Disable Inline Native ads
WebMD Article

New PDT therapy for CTCL to be reviewed by FDA

Article Type
Changed
Mon, 01/09/2023 - 09:39

A new drug application for a first-in-class photodynamic (PDT) therapy for treating early-stage cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (CTCL) has been submitted to the Food and Drug Administration based on phase 3 findings published in JAMA Dermatology.

The treatment employs an ointment formulation of synthetic hypericin (HyBryte), a photosensitizer, that is preferentially absorbed into malignant cells and activated with visible light – rather than ultraviolet light – approximately 24 hours later. Investigators saw significant clinical responses in both patch and plaque type lesions and across races during the 24-week placebo-controlled, double-blinded, phase 3, randomized clinical trial.

“Traditional phototherapy, ultraviolet B phototherapy, has a limited depth of penetration, so patients with thicker plaque lesions don’t respond as well ... and UVB phototherapy typically is less effective in penetrating pigmented skin,” Ellen J. Kim, MD, lead author of the FLASH phase 3 trial, said in an interview.

Visible light in the yellow-red spectrum (500-650 nm) “penetrates deeper into the skin” and is nonmutagenic in vitro, so “theoretically it should have a much more favorable long-term safety profile,” said Dr. Kim, a dermatologist at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.

Currently, she said, the risk of secondary malignancies inherent with UV PDT, including melanoma, is a deterrent for some patients, especially “patients with really fair skin and a history of skin cancer.”

Hypericin PDT also seems well suited for use with an at-home light unit. “In our field, it’s not about which therapy is [universally] better or best, but a matter of what works best for each patient at that moment in time, depending on the side-effect profile and other issues such as access,” Dr. Kim said. “It will be great to have another option for an incurable disease that requires chronic management.”

Mycosis fungoides (MF)/CTCL is considered an orphan disease, and the treatment has received orphan drug and fast track designations from the FDA, and orphan designation from the European Medicines Agency, according to a press release from its developer, Soligenix. The company is anticipating potential approval in the second half of 2023 and is targeting early 2024 for a U.S. launch, the statement said.

Phase 3 results

The pivotal trial involved 169 patients at 39 academic and community-based U.S. medical centers and consisted of several 6-week cycles of twice-weekly treatment punctuated by 2-week breaks. In cycle 1, patients were randomized 2:1 to receive hypericin or placebo treatment of three index lesions. Cycle 2 involved the crossover of placebo patients to active treatment of index lesions, and cycle 3 (optional) involved open-label treatment of all desired lesions (index and nonindex).

The trial defined the primary endpoint in phase 1 as 50% or greater improvement in the modified Composite Assessment of Index Lesion Severity score – a tool that’s endorsed by U.S. and international MF/CTCL specialty group consensus guidelines. For cycles 2 and 3, open-label response rates were secondary endpoints. Responses were assessed after 2-week rest periods to allow for treatment-induced skin reactions to subside.

After one cycle of treatment, topical hypericin PDT was more effective than placebo (an index lesion response rate of 16% vs. 4%; P =.04). The index lesion response rate with treatment increased to 40% after two cycles and 49% after three cycles. All were statistically significant changes.

Response rates were similar in patch and plaque-type lesions and regardless of age, sex, race, stage IA versus IB, time since diagnosis, and number of prior therapies. Adverse events were primarily mild application-site skin reactions. No serious drug-related adverse events occurred, Dr. Kim said, and “we had a low drop-out rate overall.”
 

 

 

Into the real world

The 24-week phase 3 trial duration is short, considering that “typically, phototherapy takes between 4 to 24 months [to achieve] full responses in CTCL,” Dr. Kim said in the interview.

So with real-world application, she said, “we’ll want to see where the overall response peaks with longer treatment, what the effects are of continuous treatment without any built-in breaks, and whether we will indeed see less skin cancer development in patients who are at higher risk of developing skin cancers from light treatment.”

Such questions will be explored as part of a new 4-year, 50-patient, open-label, multicenter study with the primary aim of investigating home-based hypericin PDT therapy in a supervised setting, said Dr. Kim, principal investigator of this study. Patients who are doing well after 6 weeks of twice-weekly therapy will be given at-home light units to continue therapy and achieve 1 year of treatment with no breaks. They will be monitored with video-based telemedicine.

“Long term, having a home unit should really improve patient access and compliance and hopefully effectiveness,” Dr. Kim said. Based on the phase 3 experience, “we think that continuous treatment will be well tolerated and that we may see greater responses.”

On Dec. 19, Soligenix announced that enrollment had begun in a phase 2a study of synthetic hypericin for treating patients with mild to moderate psoriasis.

Dr. Kim reported to JAMA Dermatology grants from Innate Pharma and Galderma; consulting/advisory fees from Almirall, Galderma, and Helsinn; and honoraria from Ology and UptoDate.

Publications
Topics
Sections

A new drug application for a first-in-class photodynamic (PDT) therapy for treating early-stage cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (CTCL) has been submitted to the Food and Drug Administration based on phase 3 findings published in JAMA Dermatology.

The treatment employs an ointment formulation of synthetic hypericin (HyBryte), a photosensitizer, that is preferentially absorbed into malignant cells and activated with visible light – rather than ultraviolet light – approximately 24 hours later. Investigators saw significant clinical responses in both patch and plaque type lesions and across races during the 24-week placebo-controlled, double-blinded, phase 3, randomized clinical trial.

“Traditional phototherapy, ultraviolet B phototherapy, has a limited depth of penetration, so patients with thicker plaque lesions don’t respond as well ... and UVB phototherapy typically is less effective in penetrating pigmented skin,” Ellen J. Kim, MD, lead author of the FLASH phase 3 trial, said in an interview.

Visible light in the yellow-red spectrum (500-650 nm) “penetrates deeper into the skin” and is nonmutagenic in vitro, so “theoretically it should have a much more favorable long-term safety profile,” said Dr. Kim, a dermatologist at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.

Currently, she said, the risk of secondary malignancies inherent with UV PDT, including melanoma, is a deterrent for some patients, especially “patients with really fair skin and a history of skin cancer.”

Hypericin PDT also seems well suited for use with an at-home light unit. “In our field, it’s not about which therapy is [universally] better or best, but a matter of what works best for each patient at that moment in time, depending on the side-effect profile and other issues such as access,” Dr. Kim said. “It will be great to have another option for an incurable disease that requires chronic management.”

Mycosis fungoides (MF)/CTCL is considered an orphan disease, and the treatment has received orphan drug and fast track designations from the FDA, and orphan designation from the European Medicines Agency, according to a press release from its developer, Soligenix. The company is anticipating potential approval in the second half of 2023 and is targeting early 2024 for a U.S. launch, the statement said.

Phase 3 results

The pivotal trial involved 169 patients at 39 academic and community-based U.S. medical centers and consisted of several 6-week cycles of twice-weekly treatment punctuated by 2-week breaks. In cycle 1, patients were randomized 2:1 to receive hypericin or placebo treatment of three index lesions. Cycle 2 involved the crossover of placebo patients to active treatment of index lesions, and cycle 3 (optional) involved open-label treatment of all desired lesions (index and nonindex).

The trial defined the primary endpoint in phase 1 as 50% or greater improvement in the modified Composite Assessment of Index Lesion Severity score – a tool that’s endorsed by U.S. and international MF/CTCL specialty group consensus guidelines. For cycles 2 and 3, open-label response rates were secondary endpoints. Responses were assessed after 2-week rest periods to allow for treatment-induced skin reactions to subside.

After one cycle of treatment, topical hypericin PDT was more effective than placebo (an index lesion response rate of 16% vs. 4%; P =.04). The index lesion response rate with treatment increased to 40% after two cycles and 49% after three cycles. All were statistically significant changes.

Response rates were similar in patch and plaque-type lesions and regardless of age, sex, race, stage IA versus IB, time since diagnosis, and number of prior therapies. Adverse events were primarily mild application-site skin reactions. No serious drug-related adverse events occurred, Dr. Kim said, and “we had a low drop-out rate overall.”
 

 

 

Into the real world

The 24-week phase 3 trial duration is short, considering that “typically, phototherapy takes between 4 to 24 months [to achieve] full responses in CTCL,” Dr. Kim said in the interview.

So with real-world application, she said, “we’ll want to see where the overall response peaks with longer treatment, what the effects are of continuous treatment without any built-in breaks, and whether we will indeed see less skin cancer development in patients who are at higher risk of developing skin cancers from light treatment.”

Such questions will be explored as part of a new 4-year, 50-patient, open-label, multicenter study with the primary aim of investigating home-based hypericin PDT therapy in a supervised setting, said Dr. Kim, principal investigator of this study. Patients who are doing well after 6 weeks of twice-weekly therapy will be given at-home light units to continue therapy and achieve 1 year of treatment with no breaks. They will be monitored with video-based telemedicine.

“Long term, having a home unit should really improve patient access and compliance and hopefully effectiveness,” Dr. Kim said. Based on the phase 3 experience, “we think that continuous treatment will be well tolerated and that we may see greater responses.”

On Dec. 19, Soligenix announced that enrollment had begun in a phase 2a study of synthetic hypericin for treating patients with mild to moderate psoriasis.

Dr. Kim reported to JAMA Dermatology grants from Innate Pharma and Galderma; consulting/advisory fees from Almirall, Galderma, and Helsinn; and honoraria from Ology and UptoDate.

A new drug application for a first-in-class photodynamic (PDT) therapy for treating early-stage cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (CTCL) has been submitted to the Food and Drug Administration based on phase 3 findings published in JAMA Dermatology.

The treatment employs an ointment formulation of synthetic hypericin (HyBryte), a photosensitizer, that is preferentially absorbed into malignant cells and activated with visible light – rather than ultraviolet light – approximately 24 hours later. Investigators saw significant clinical responses in both patch and plaque type lesions and across races during the 24-week placebo-controlled, double-blinded, phase 3, randomized clinical trial.

“Traditional phototherapy, ultraviolet B phototherapy, has a limited depth of penetration, so patients with thicker plaque lesions don’t respond as well ... and UVB phototherapy typically is less effective in penetrating pigmented skin,” Ellen J. Kim, MD, lead author of the FLASH phase 3 trial, said in an interview.

Visible light in the yellow-red spectrum (500-650 nm) “penetrates deeper into the skin” and is nonmutagenic in vitro, so “theoretically it should have a much more favorable long-term safety profile,” said Dr. Kim, a dermatologist at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.

Currently, she said, the risk of secondary malignancies inherent with UV PDT, including melanoma, is a deterrent for some patients, especially “patients with really fair skin and a history of skin cancer.”

Hypericin PDT also seems well suited for use with an at-home light unit. “In our field, it’s not about which therapy is [universally] better or best, but a matter of what works best for each patient at that moment in time, depending on the side-effect profile and other issues such as access,” Dr. Kim said. “It will be great to have another option for an incurable disease that requires chronic management.”

Mycosis fungoides (MF)/CTCL is considered an orphan disease, and the treatment has received orphan drug and fast track designations from the FDA, and orphan designation from the European Medicines Agency, according to a press release from its developer, Soligenix. The company is anticipating potential approval in the second half of 2023 and is targeting early 2024 for a U.S. launch, the statement said.

Phase 3 results

The pivotal trial involved 169 patients at 39 academic and community-based U.S. medical centers and consisted of several 6-week cycles of twice-weekly treatment punctuated by 2-week breaks. In cycle 1, patients were randomized 2:1 to receive hypericin or placebo treatment of three index lesions. Cycle 2 involved the crossover of placebo patients to active treatment of index lesions, and cycle 3 (optional) involved open-label treatment of all desired lesions (index and nonindex).

The trial defined the primary endpoint in phase 1 as 50% or greater improvement in the modified Composite Assessment of Index Lesion Severity score – a tool that’s endorsed by U.S. and international MF/CTCL specialty group consensus guidelines. For cycles 2 and 3, open-label response rates were secondary endpoints. Responses were assessed after 2-week rest periods to allow for treatment-induced skin reactions to subside.

After one cycle of treatment, topical hypericin PDT was more effective than placebo (an index lesion response rate of 16% vs. 4%; P =.04). The index lesion response rate with treatment increased to 40% after two cycles and 49% after three cycles. All were statistically significant changes.

Response rates were similar in patch and plaque-type lesions and regardless of age, sex, race, stage IA versus IB, time since diagnosis, and number of prior therapies. Adverse events were primarily mild application-site skin reactions. No serious drug-related adverse events occurred, Dr. Kim said, and “we had a low drop-out rate overall.”
 

 

 

Into the real world

The 24-week phase 3 trial duration is short, considering that “typically, phototherapy takes between 4 to 24 months [to achieve] full responses in CTCL,” Dr. Kim said in the interview.

So with real-world application, she said, “we’ll want to see where the overall response peaks with longer treatment, what the effects are of continuous treatment without any built-in breaks, and whether we will indeed see less skin cancer development in patients who are at higher risk of developing skin cancers from light treatment.”

Such questions will be explored as part of a new 4-year, 50-patient, open-label, multicenter study with the primary aim of investigating home-based hypericin PDT therapy in a supervised setting, said Dr. Kim, principal investigator of this study. Patients who are doing well after 6 weeks of twice-weekly therapy will be given at-home light units to continue therapy and achieve 1 year of treatment with no breaks. They will be monitored with video-based telemedicine.

“Long term, having a home unit should really improve patient access and compliance and hopefully effectiveness,” Dr. Kim said. Based on the phase 3 experience, “we think that continuous treatment will be well tolerated and that we may see greater responses.”

On Dec. 19, Soligenix announced that enrollment had begun in a phase 2a study of synthetic hypericin for treating patients with mild to moderate psoriasis.

Dr. Kim reported to JAMA Dermatology grants from Innate Pharma and Galderma; consulting/advisory fees from Almirall, Galderma, and Helsinn; and honoraria from Ology and UptoDate.

Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Sections
Disallow All Ads
Content Gating
No Gating (article Unlocked/Free)
Alternative CME
Disqus Comments
Default
Use ProPublica
Hide sidebar & use full width
render the right sidebar.
Conference Recap Checkbox
Not Conference Recap
Clinical Edge
Display the Slideshow in this Article
Medscape Article
Display survey writer
Reuters content
Disable Inline Native ads
WebMD Article

FDA calls for withdrawal of multiple myeloma drug Pepaxto

Article Type
Changed
Wed, 12/21/2022 - 13:49

The Food and Drug Administration has requested that Oncopeptides withdraw the U.S. marketing authorization for its multiple myeloma drug Pepaxto (melphalan flufenamide), the company announced in a press release.
 

The drug was granted an accelerated approval by the FDA in February 2021, for use in combination with dexamethasone in adults with relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma who have received at least four prior lines of therapy.

However, the phase 3 OCEAN study raised concerns about safety, as it showed a higher mortality associated with melphalan flufenamide in the experimental arm, compared with pomalidomide (Pomalyst).

The FDA already flagged this issue in July 2021, issuing a safety alert flagging the increased risk for death observed in the OCEAN trial among patients receiving melphalan flufenamide versus pomalidomide (47.6% vs. 43.4%) and a 5.3-month shorter overall survival.

The issue was also discussed in September 2022 by FDA’s Oncologic Drugs Advisory Committee, which voted 14-to-2 against maintaining the accelerated approval, citing an unfavorable risk/benefit profile.

The company stopped marketing the drug in the United States in October 2021 at the FDA’s request but continued to make it available for patients already undergoing treatment.

However, in March 2022, Oncopeptides rescinded the letter that voluntarily withdrew the agent from market, after further review of overall survival data from the OCEAN trial led the company to reconsider its decision. Notably, marketing efforts were still discontinued while the company worked with the FDA to interpret the data, it stated in the press release.

That review of the data showed that progression-free survival was 42% higher with melphalan flufenamide versus pomalidomide and overall response rates were 32.1% versus 26.5%, respectively.

Now, the FDA has requested that the company withdraw its U.S. marketing authorization.

“We respect FDA’s accelerated approval regulations,” Jakob Lindberg, CEO of Oncopeptides commented in the press release.

However, he also added, “multiple myeloma remains an incurable disease, and the treatment options for patients with triple-class refractory disease will ultimately become exhausted. The OCEAN study demonstrated clinical benefit for multiple myeloma patients, in particular for nontransplanted elderly patients where the unmet medical need remains very high.”

Commercialization of the drug in Europe, under the brand name Pepaxti, is ongoing.

“Pepaxti has a full approval from the European Medicines Agency, EMA, since Aug. 18, 2022, and was approved by the Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency, MHRA, in the U.K. on Nov 11, 2022,” the company noted.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Publications
Topics
Sections

The Food and Drug Administration has requested that Oncopeptides withdraw the U.S. marketing authorization for its multiple myeloma drug Pepaxto (melphalan flufenamide), the company announced in a press release.
 

The drug was granted an accelerated approval by the FDA in February 2021, for use in combination with dexamethasone in adults with relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma who have received at least four prior lines of therapy.

However, the phase 3 OCEAN study raised concerns about safety, as it showed a higher mortality associated with melphalan flufenamide in the experimental arm, compared with pomalidomide (Pomalyst).

The FDA already flagged this issue in July 2021, issuing a safety alert flagging the increased risk for death observed in the OCEAN trial among patients receiving melphalan flufenamide versus pomalidomide (47.6% vs. 43.4%) and a 5.3-month shorter overall survival.

The issue was also discussed in September 2022 by FDA’s Oncologic Drugs Advisory Committee, which voted 14-to-2 against maintaining the accelerated approval, citing an unfavorable risk/benefit profile.

The company stopped marketing the drug in the United States in October 2021 at the FDA’s request but continued to make it available for patients already undergoing treatment.

However, in March 2022, Oncopeptides rescinded the letter that voluntarily withdrew the agent from market, after further review of overall survival data from the OCEAN trial led the company to reconsider its decision. Notably, marketing efforts were still discontinued while the company worked with the FDA to interpret the data, it stated in the press release.

That review of the data showed that progression-free survival was 42% higher with melphalan flufenamide versus pomalidomide and overall response rates were 32.1% versus 26.5%, respectively.

Now, the FDA has requested that the company withdraw its U.S. marketing authorization.

“We respect FDA’s accelerated approval regulations,” Jakob Lindberg, CEO of Oncopeptides commented in the press release.

However, he also added, “multiple myeloma remains an incurable disease, and the treatment options for patients with triple-class refractory disease will ultimately become exhausted. The OCEAN study demonstrated clinical benefit for multiple myeloma patients, in particular for nontransplanted elderly patients where the unmet medical need remains very high.”

Commercialization of the drug in Europe, under the brand name Pepaxti, is ongoing.

“Pepaxti has a full approval from the European Medicines Agency, EMA, since Aug. 18, 2022, and was approved by the Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency, MHRA, in the U.K. on Nov 11, 2022,” the company noted.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

The Food and Drug Administration has requested that Oncopeptides withdraw the U.S. marketing authorization for its multiple myeloma drug Pepaxto (melphalan flufenamide), the company announced in a press release.
 

The drug was granted an accelerated approval by the FDA in February 2021, for use in combination with dexamethasone in adults with relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma who have received at least four prior lines of therapy.

However, the phase 3 OCEAN study raised concerns about safety, as it showed a higher mortality associated with melphalan flufenamide in the experimental arm, compared with pomalidomide (Pomalyst).

The FDA already flagged this issue in July 2021, issuing a safety alert flagging the increased risk for death observed in the OCEAN trial among patients receiving melphalan flufenamide versus pomalidomide (47.6% vs. 43.4%) and a 5.3-month shorter overall survival.

The issue was also discussed in September 2022 by FDA’s Oncologic Drugs Advisory Committee, which voted 14-to-2 against maintaining the accelerated approval, citing an unfavorable risk/benefit profile.

The company stopped marketing the drug in the United States in October 2021 at the FDA’s request but continued to make it available for patients already undergoing treatment.

However, in March 2022, Oncopeptides rescinded the letter that voluntarily withdrew the agent from market, after further review of overall survival data from the OCEAN trial led the company to reconsider its decision. Notably, marketing efforts were still discontinued while the company worked with the FDA to interpret the data, it stated in the press release.

That review of the data showed that progression-free survival was 42% higher with melphalan flufenamide versus pomalidomide and overall response rates were 32.1% versus 26.5%, respectively.

Now, the FDA has requested that the company withdraw its U.S. marketing authorization.

“We respect FDA’s accelerated approval regulations,” Jakob Lindberg, CEO of Oncopeptides commented in the press release.

However, he also added, “multiple myeloma remains an incurable disease, and the treatment options for patients with triple-class refractory disease will ultimately become exhausted. The OCEAN study demonstrated clinical benefit for multiple myeloma patients, in particular for nontransplanted elderly patients where the unmet medical need remains very high.”

Commercialization of the drug in Europe, under the brand name Pepaxti, is ongoing.

“Pepaxti has a full approval from the European Medicines Agency, EMA, since Aug. 18, 2022, and was approved by the Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency, MHRA, in the U.K. on Nov 11, 2022,” the company noted.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Sections
Disallow All Ads
Content Gating
No Gating (article Unlocked/Free)
Alternative CME
Disqus Comments
Default
Use ProPublica
Hide sidebar & use full width
render the right sidebar.
Conference Recap Checkbox
Not Conference Recap
Clinical Edge
Display the Slideshow in this Article
Medscape Article
Display survey writer
Reuters content
Disable Inline Native ads
WebMD Article

Multiple myeloma diagnosed more via emergency care during COVID

Article Type
Changed
Wed, 01/11/2023 - 16:55

The study covered in this summary was published on Research Square as a preprint and has not yet been peer reviewed.

Key takeaway

Patients with multiple myeloma were diagnosed at a significantly higher rate through emergency care during the COVID-19 pandemic, compared with before.

Why this matters

While trying to avoid COVID-19 infection, patients ultimately diagnosed with multiple myeloma may have delayed interactions with healthcare professionals and consequently delayed their cancer diagnosis.

Study design

Researchers collected data on newly diagnosed patients with multiple myeloma from January 2019 until July 2021 across five institutions (three universities and two hospitals) in England. In total, 323 patients with multiple myeloma were identified.

Patients were divided into two groups: those diagnosed between Jan. 1, 2019, until Jan. 31, 2020, or pre-COVID, and those diagnosed from Feb. 1, 2020, to July 31, 2021, or post COVID.
 

Key results

Among all patients, 80 (24.8%) were diagnosed with smoldering multiple myeloma and 243 (75.2%) were diagnosed with multiple myeloma requiring treatment.

Significantly more patients in the post-COVID group were diagnosed with myeloma through the emergency route (45.5% post COVID vs. 32.7% pre-COVID; = .03).

Clinical complications leading to emergency admission prior to a myeloma diagnosis also differed between the two cohorts: Acute kidney injury accounted for most emergency admissions in the pre-COVID cohort while skeletal-related events, including spinal cord compression, were the major causes for diagnosis through the emergency route in the post-COVID cohort.

Patients who were diagnosed with symptomatic myeloma pre-COVID were more likely to be treated with a triplet rather than doublet combination compared with those diagnosed in the post-COVID period (triplet pre-COVID 79.1%, post COVID 63.75%; = .014).

Overall survival at 1 year was not significantly different between the pre-COVID and post-COVID groups: 88.2% pre-COVID, compared with 87.8% post COVID. 

Overall, the authors concluded that the COVID pandemic “resulted in a shift in the symptomatology, disease burden, and routes of diagnosis of patients presenting with myeloma” and “this may have significant consequences” over the long term.
 

Limitations

The study does not provide a clear time frame of delays in diagnosis.

Disclosures

The study authors did not report any conflicts of interest.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com .

Publications
Topics
Sections

The study covered in this summary was published on Research Square as a preprint and has not yet been peer reviewed.

Key takeaway

Patients with multiple myeloma were diagnosed at a significantly higher rate through emergency care during the COVID-19 pandemic, compared with before.

Why this matters

While trying to avoid COVID-19 infection, patients ultimately diagnosed with multiple myeloma may have delayed interactions with healthcare professionals and consequently delayed their cancer diagnosis.

Study design

Researchers collected data on newly diagnosed patients with multiple myeloma from January 2019 until July 2021 across five institutions (three universities and two hospitals) in England. In total, 323 patients with multiple myeloma were identified.

Patients were divided into two groups: those diagnosed between Jan. 1, 2019, until Jan. 31, 2020, or pre-COVID, and those diagnosed from Feb. 1, 2020, to July 31, 2021, or post COVID.
 

Key results

Among all patients, 80 (24.8%) were diagnosed with smoldering multiple myeloma and 243 (75.2%) were diagnosed with multiple myeloma requiring treatment.

Significantly more patients in the post-COVID group were diagnosed with myeloma through the emergency route (45.5% post COVID vs. 32.7% pre-COVID; = .03).

Clinical complications leading to emergency admission prior to a myeloma diagnosis also differed between the two cohorts: Acute kidney injury accounted for most emergency admissions in the pre-COVID cohort while skeletal-related events, including spinal cord compression, were the major causes for diagnosis through the emergency route in the post-COVID cohort.

Patients who were diagnosed with symptomatic myeloma pre-COVID were more likely to be treated with a triplet rather than doublet combination compared with those diagnosed in the post-COVID period (triplet pre-COVID 79.1%, post COVID 63.75%; = .014).

Overall survival at 1 year was not significantly different between the pre-COVID and post-COVID groups: 88.2% pre-COVID, compared with 87.8% post COVID. 

Overall, the authors concluded that the COVID pandemic “resulted in a shift in the symptomatology, disease burden, and routes of diagnosis of patients presenting with myeloma” and “this may have significant consequences” over the long term.
 

Limitations

The study does not provide a clear time frame of delays in diagnosis.

Disclosures

The study authors did not report any conflicts of interest.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com .

The study covered in this summary was published on Research Square as a preprint and has not yet been peer reviewed.

Key takeaway

Patients with multiple myeloma were diagnosed at a significantly higher rate through emergency care during the COVID-19 pandemic, compared with before.

Why this matters

While trying to avoid COVID-19 infection, patients ultimately diagnosed with multiple myeloma may have delayed interactions with healthcare professionals and consequently delayed their cancer diagnosis.

Study design

Researchers collected data on newly diagnosed patients with multiple myeloma from January 2019 until July 2021 across five institutions (three universities and two hospitals) in England. In total, 323 patients with multiple myeloma were identified.

Patients were divided into two groups: those diagnosed between Jan. 1, 2019, until Jan. 31, 2020, or pre-COVID, and those diagnosed from Feb. 1, 2020, to July 31, 2021, or post COVID.
 

Key results

Among all patients, 80 (24.8%) were diagnosed with smoldering multiple myeloma and 243 (75.2%) were diagnosed with multiple myeloma requiring treatment.

Significantly more patients in the post-COVID group were diagnosed with myeloma through the emergency route (45.5% post COVID vs. 32.7% pre-COVID; = .03).

Clinical complications leading to emergency admission prior to a myeloma diagnosis also differed between the two cohorts: Acute kidney injury accounted for most emergency admissions in the pre-COVID cohort while skeletal-related events, including spinal cord compression, were the major causes for diagnosis through the emergency route in the post-COVID cohort.

Patients who were diagnosed with symptomatic myeloma pre-COVID were more likely to be treated with a triplet rather than doublet combination compared with those diagnosed in the post-COVID period (triplet pre-COVID 79.1%, post COVID 63.75%; = .014).

Overall survival at 1 year was not significantly different between the pre-COVID and post-COVID groups: 88.2% pre-COVID, compared with 87.8% post COVID. 

Overall, the authors concluded that the COVID pandemic “resulted in a shift in the symptomatology, disease burden, and routes of diagnosis of patients presenting with myeloma” and “this may have significant consequences” over the long term.
 

Limitations

The study does not provide a clear time frame of delays in diagnosis.

Disclosures

The study authors did not report any conflicts of interest.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com .

Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Sections
Disallow All Ads
Content Gating
No Gating (article Unlocked/Free)
Alternative CME
Disqus Comments
Default
Use ProPublica
Hide sidebar & use full width
render the right sidebar.
Conference Recap Checkbox
Not Conference Recap
Clinical Edge
Display the Slideshow in this Article
Medscape Article
Display survey writer
Reuters content
Disable Inline Native ads
WebMD Article

From B to T: a Case of Concurrent B-Cell and T-Cell Lymphomas Successfully Palliated With Targeted Therapies

Article Type
Changed
Fri, 09/09/2022 - 15:28

Background

Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) is the most common aggressive type of non- Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL), comprising 30% of all NHL. Due to a decreased state of immunosurveillance resulting from the disease itself and its associated therapies, patients are at increased risk of developing a secondary malignancy. Multiple primary malignancies have been reported to occur in up to 15% of patients with DLBCL, retrospectively.

Herein, we review a case of a man with DLBCL who concomitantly developed ALK negative anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALCL) distinctly of T-cell lineage who was successfully treated with palliative therapy for both diagnoses despite his advanced age and diagnosis associated with a poor prognosis with continued effect and sustained quality of life.

Case Report

An 88-year-old man presented with stage III DLBCL, diagnosed in 12/2018, was deemed not to be an aggressive therapy candidate. As such, he was treated with Rituximab monotherapy for 6 cycles, ending in 02/2019, with remarkably good effect. He remained in a PR with stable disease on serial PET/CTs until 09/2021, at which time he was noted to have Horner’s Syndrome in clinic. CT chest demonstrated a right apical lung mass, not previously seen on prior scans measuring 4.2 x 2.7 cm. Other sites of nodal disease remained stable on PET/CT.

Biopsy of the lesion revealed CD30+ ALK-negative ALCL with distinct T-cell marker positivity on immunohistochemistry and the absence of B-cell lineage markers. After discussion at our treatment planning conference, we decided to treat with brentuximab-vedotin (Bv) monotherapy for 6 cycles. End of treatment PET/CT demonstrated a PR with near resolution in background PET avidity at the lesion. His symptoms of Horner syndrome also improved.

Conclusion

A diagnosis of aggressive lymphoma increases the risk of developing a secondary malignancy and providers should remain vigilant of this. Elderly individuals in whom aggressive therapies may be precluded can still greatly benefit from palliative targeted therapy even in the setting of diseases historically associated with a poor prognosis.

Issue
Federal Practitioner - 39(4)s
Publications
Topics
Page Number
S19

Background

Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) is the most common aggressive type of non- Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL), comprising 30% of all NHL. Due to a decreased state of immunosurveillance resulting from the disease itself and its associated therapies, patients are at increased risk of developing a secondary malignancy. Multiple primary malignancies have been reported to occur in up to 15% of patients with DLBCL, retrospectively.

Herein, we review a case of a man with DLBCL who concomitantly developed ALK negative anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALCL) distinctly of T-cell lineage who was successfully treated with palliative therapy for both diagnoses despite his advanced age and diagnosis associated with a poor prognosis with continued effect and sustained quality of life.

Case Report

An 88-year-old man presented with stage III DLBCL, diagnosed in 12/2018, was deemed not to be an aggressive therapy candidate. As such, he was treated with Rituximab monotherapy for 6 cycles, ending in 02/2019, with remarkably good effect. He remained in a PR with stable disease on serial PET/CTs until 09/2021, at which time he was noted to have Horner’s Syndrome in clinic. CT chest demonstrated a right apical lung mass, not previously seen on prior scans measuring 4.2 x 2.7 cm. Other sites of nodal disease remained stable on PET/CT.

Biopsy of the lesion revealed CD30+ ALK-negative ALCL with distinct T-cell marker positivity on immunohistochemistry and the absence of B-cell lineage markers. After discussion at our treatment planning conference, we decided to treat with brentuximab-vedotin (Bv) monotherapy for 6 cycles. End of treatment PET/CT demonstrated a PR with near resolution in background PET avidity at the lesion. His symptoms of Horner syndrome also improved.

Conclusion

A diagnosis of aggressive lymphoma increases the risk of developing a secondary malignancy and providers should remain vigilant of this. Elderly individuals in whom aggressive therapies may be precluded can still greatly benefit from palliative targeted therapy even in the setting of diseases historically associated with a poor prognosis.

Background

Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) is the most common aggressive type of non- Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL), comprising 30% of all NHL. Due to a decreased state of immunosurveillance resulting from the disease itself and its associated therapies, patients are at increased risk of developing a secondary malignancy. Multiple primary malignancies have been reported to occur in up to 15% of patients with DLBCL, retrospectively.

Herein, we review a case of a man with DLBCL who concomitantly developed ALK negative anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALCL) distinctly of T-cell lineage who was successfully treated with palliative therapy for both diagnoses despite his advanced age and diagnosis associated with a poor prognosis with continued effect and sustained quality of life.

Case Report

An 88-year-old man presented with stage III DLBCL, diagnosed in 12/2018, was deemed not to be an aggressive therapy candidate. As such, he was treated with Rituximab monotherapy for 6 cycles, ending in 02/2019, with remarkably good effect. He remained in a PR with stable disease on serial PET/CTs until 09/2021, at which time he was noted to have Horner’s Syndrome in clinic. CT chest demonstrated a right apical lung mass, not previously seen on prior scans measuring 4.2 x 2.7 cm. Other sites of nodal disease remained stable on PET/CT.

Biopsy of the lesion revealed CD30+ ALK-negative ALCL with distinct T-cell marker positivity on immunohistochemistry and the absence of B-cell lineage markers. After discussion at our treatment planning conference, we decided to treat with brentuximab-vedotin (Bv) monotherapy for 6 cycles. End of treatment PET/CT demonstrated a PR with near resolution in background PET avidity at the lesion. His symptoms of Horner syndrome also improved.

Conclusion

A diagnosis of aggressive lymphoma increases the risk of developing a secondary malignancy and providers should remain vigilant of this. Elderly individuals in whom aggressive therapies may be precluded can still greatly benefit from palliative targeted therapy even in the setting of diseases historically associated with a poor prognosis.

Issue
Federal Practitioner - 39(4)s
Issue
Federal Practitioner - 39(4)s
Page Number
S19
Page Number
S19
Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Disallow All Ads
Content Gating
No Gating (article Unlocked/Free)
Alternative CME
Disqus Comments
Default
Gate On Date
Fri, 09/09/2022 - 15:30
Un-Gate On Date
Fri, 09/09/2022 - 15:30
Use ProPublica
CFC Schedule Remove Status
Fri, 09/09/2022 - 15:30
Hide sidebar & use full width
render the right sidebar.
Conference Recap Checkbox
Not Conference Recap
Clinical Edge
Display the Slideshow in this Article
Medscape Article
Display survey writer
Reuters content
Disable Inline Native ads
WebMD Article

Evaluating the Incidence of Febrile Neutropenia and the Appropriate Use of Prophylactic Granulocyte Colony Stimulating Factors in Veterans Who Received Treatment for Non- Hodgkin’s Lymphoma

Article Type
Changed
Thu, 12/15/2022 - 14:26

Introduction

Febrile neutropenia (FN) is one of the most concerning complications associated with chemotherapy treatment, often leading to hospitalizations and delays in chemotherapy. The NCCN Guideline recommends primary prophylaxis with G-CSFs for patients receiving chemotherapy regimens that have an intermediate risk for FN if the patients have risk factors. A common intermediate risk for FN regimen is CHOP plus an anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody (mAb) for the treatment of non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma (NHL). At VASDHCS, an evaluation of the appropriate use of prophylactic GCSFs in this risk group would allow better optimization of patient care.

Objective

To evaluate the incidence of FN in correlation with the appropriate use of G-CSFs in patients who received CHOP plus an anti-CD20 mAb for the treatment of NHL

Methods

This is a retrospective study at VA San Diego of adult veterans with a confirmed diagnosis of NHL who received the first cycle of CHOP plus an anti- CD20 mAb between January 1, 2006, to October 1, 2021. Patients were categorized based on whether they received prophylactic G-CSF during the first cycle. The primary outcome measured was the incidence of FN in veterans with risk factor(s) who received CHOP plus an anti-CD20 mAb. The secondary outcome was the percentage of patients with risk factors who received G-CSF regardless of FN incidence. Primary outcome was analyzed using 2-tailed Fisher exact test.

Results

57 patients were included in the final analysis. In patients with at least one risk factor for FN, 26 (60%) received prophylactic G-CSF and 17 (40%) did not. There is 1 case of FN in the group that received G-CSF and 2 cases of FN in the group without G-CSF (RR, 0.33; P = .55; 95% CI, 0.03-3.33).

Conculsions

In patients receiving treatment for NHL with CHOP plus an anti-CD20 mAb, most of the patients with at least 1 risk factor for FN were initiated on G-CSF. Based on the results of the study, our veteran population does not appear to have an increased risk for FN without G-CSF. A larger study is warranted to further evaluate the significance of FN in correlation with prophylactic G-CSF.

Publications
Topics
Sections

Introduction

Febrile neutropenia (FN) is one of the most concerning complications associated with chemotherapy treatment, often leading to hospitalizations and delays in chemotherapy. The NCCN Guideline recommends primary prophylaxis with G-CSFs for patients receiving chemotherapy regimens that have an intermediate risk for FN if the patients have risk factors. A common intermediate risk for FN regimen is CHOP plus an anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody (mAb) for the treatment of non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma (NHL). At VASDHCS, an evaluation of the appropriate use of prophylactic GCSFs in this risk group would allow better optimization of patient care.

Objective

To evaluate the incidence of FN in correlation with the appropriate use of G-CSFs in patients who received CHOP plus an anti-CD20 mAb for the treatment of NHL

Methods

This is a retrospective study at VA San Diego of adult veterans with a confirmed diagnosis of NHL who received the first cycle of CHOP plus an anti- CD20 mAb between January 1, 2006, to October 1, 2021. Patients were categorized based on whether they received prophylactic G-CSF during the first cycle. The primary outcome measured was the incidence of FN in veterans with risk factor(s) who received CHOP plus an anti-CD20 mAb. The secondary outcome was the percentage of patients with risk factors who received G-CSF regardless of FN incidence. Primary outcome was analyzed using 2-tailed Fisher exact test.

Results

57 patients were included in the final analysis. In patients with at least one risk factor for FN, 26 (60%) received prophylactic G-CSF and 17 (40%) did not. There is 1 case of FN in the group that received G-CSF and 2 cases of FN in the group without G-CSF (RR, 0.33; P = .55; 95% CI, 0.03-3.33).

Conculsions

In patients receiving treatment for NHL with CHOP plus an anti-CD20 mAb, most of the patients with at least 1 risk factor for FN were initiated on G-CSF. Based on the results of the study, our veteran population does not appear to have an increased risk for FN without G-CSF. A larger study is warranted to further evaluate the significance of FN in correlation with prophylactic G-CSF.

Introduction

Febrile neutropenia (FN) is one of the most concerning complications associated with chemotherapy treatment, often leading to hospitalizations and delays in chemotherapy. The NCCN Guideline recommends primary prophylaxis with G-CSFs for patients receiving chemotherapy regimens that have an intermediate risk for FN if the patients have risk factors. A common intermediate risk for FN regimen is CHOP plus an anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody (mAb) for the treatment of non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma (NHL). At VASDHCS, an evaluation of the appropriate use of prophylactic GCSFs in this risk group would allow better optimization of patient care.

Objective

To evaluate the incidence of FN in correlation with the appropriate use of G-CSFs in patients who received CHOP plus an anti-CD20 mAb for the treatment of NHL

Methods

This is a retrospective study at VA San Diego of adult veterans with a confirmed diagnosis of NHL who received the first cycle of CHOP plus an anti- CD20 mAb between January 1, 2006, to October 1, 2021. Patients were categorized based on whether they received prophylactic G-CSF during the first cycle. The primary outcome measured was the incidence of FN in veterans with risk factor(s) who received CHOP plus an anti-CD20 mAb. The secondary outcome was the percentage of patients with risk factors who received G-CSF regardless of FN incidence. Primary outcome was analyzed using 2-tailed Fisher exact test.

Results

57 patients were included in the final analysis. In patients with at least one risk factor for FN, 26 (60%) received prophylactic G-CSF and 17 (40%) did not. There is 1 case of FN in the group that received G-CSF and 2 cases of FN in the group without G-CSF (RR, 0.33; P = .55; 95% CI, 0.03-3.33).

Conculsions

In patients receiving treatment for NHL with CHOP plus an anti-CD20 mAb, most of the patients with at least 1 risk factor for FN were initiated on G-CSF. Based on the results of the study, our veteran population does not appear to have an increased risk for FN without G-CSF. A larger study is warranted to further evaluate the significance of FN in correlation with prophylactic G-CSF.

Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Sections
Disallow All Ads
Content Gating
No Gating (article Unlocked/Free)
Alternative CME
Disqus Comments
Default
Gate On Date
Fri, 09/02/2022 - 11:30
Un-Gate On Date
Fri, 09/02/2022 - 11:30
Use ProPublica
CFC Schedule Remove Status
Fri, 09/02/2022 - 11:30
Hide sidebar & use full width
render the right sidebar.
Conference Recap Checkbox
Not Conference Recap
Clinical Edge
Display the Slideshow in this Article
Medscape Article
Display survey writer
Reuters content
Disable Inline Native ads
WebMD Article

A Rare Case of HHV8+ Multicentric Castleman Disease Presenting as Dermatitis

Article Type
Changed
Tue, 01/31/2023 - 08:30

Introduction

Castleman disease (CD) is a rare non-neoplastic disorder presenting as lymphadenopathy. Skin involvement and progression to lymphomas are uncommon, and such presentation can pose a diagnostic challenge. We describe an interesting case of multicentric CD presenting as a rash.

Case Description

A 79-year-old male presented with a 1-year history of blanchable maculopapular rash and new onset dyspnea in the absence of fever, fatigue or weight loss. Examination revealed axillary, cervical and inguinal lymphadenopathy, and firm splenomegaly. Initial labs were notable for leukocytosis, occasional lymphoplasmacytic cells, anemia, thrombocytopenia, negative HIV screen, and elevated ESR and LDH. Further testing identified polyclonal hypergammaglobulinemia. CT scans revealed generalized lymphadenopathy, splenomegaly with infarcts and unilateral pleural effusion. An inguinal lymph node needle biopsy, skin biopsy and pleural fluid cytology were concerning for lymphoplasmacytic, so he was started on rituximab and bendamustine. However, B cell clonality could not be demonstrated, making these findings concerning for Castleman disease.

Results

Human herpesvirus 8 (HHV-8) testing performed on the inguinal lymph node sample came out positive, and he was diagnosed with HHV-8 positive multicentric Castleman disease and continued on weekly rituximab. He demonstrated an excellent response with complete resolution of rash, palpable lymphadenopathy and anemia after 4 cycles of treatment.

Discussion

Castleman disease (CD) is a rare disorder of polyclonal B cell proliferation classically presenting as lymphadenopathy with constitutional symptoms. Cutaneous presentations include eruptive angiomas or petechial rash but can be variable. Intrinsic or viral IL-6 play a key role in the pathogenesis of the disease. CD can be localised or multicentric (related to HHV-8 +/- HIV or idiopathic), and these subtypes differ in prognosis and management, with HIV and HHV-8 co-positivity indicating worse outcomes. While human IL-6 in unicentric and idiopathic multicentric disease respond well to IL-6 receptor antagonists, viral IL-6 in HHV-8 associated cases has a limited response. This is the rationale for preferring anti-CD20 therapy with rituximab in these patients.

Conculsions

Correct biopsy specimen, keen analysis of distinct pathologic features, and HHV-8 testing on tissue sample guide the diagnosis as HHV-8 serology can be falsely negative.

Issue
Federal Practitioner - 39(4)s
Publications
Topics
Page Number
S17
Sections

Introduction

Castleman disease (CD) is a rare non-neoplastic disorder presenting as lymphadenopathy. Skin involvement and progression to lymphomas are uncommon, and such presentation can pose a diagnostic challenge. We describe an interesting case of multicentric CD presenting as a rash.

Case Description

A 79-year-old male presented with a 1-year history of blanchable maculopapular rash and new onset dyspnea in the absence of fever, fatigue or weight loss. Examination revealed axillary, cervical and inguinal lymphadenopathy, and firm splenomegaly. Initial labs were notable for leukocytosis, occasional lymphoplasmacytic cells, anemia, thrombocytopenia, negative HIV screen, and elevated ESR and LDH. Further testing identified polyclonal hypergammaglobulinemia. CT scans revealed generalized lymphadenopathy, splenomegaly with infarcts and unilateral pleural effusion. An inguinal lymph node needle biopsy, skin biopsy and pleural fluid cytology were concerning for lymphoplasmacytic, so he was started on rituximab and bendamustine. However, B cell clonality could not be demonstrated, making these findings concerning for Castleman disease.

Results

Human herpesvirus 8 (HHV-8) testing performed on the inguinal lymph node sample came out positive, and he was diagnosed with HHV-8 positive multicentric Castleman disease and continued on weekly rituximab. He demonstrated an excellent response with complete resolution of rash, palpable lymphadenopathy and anemia after 4 cycles of treatment.

Discussion

Castleman disease (CD) is a rare disorder of polyclonal B cell proliferation classically presenting as lymphadenopathy with constitutional symptoms. Cutaneous presentations include eruptive angiomas or petechial rash but can be variable. Intrinsic or viral IL-6 play a key role in the pathogenesis of the disease. CD can be localised or multicentric (related to HHV-8 +/- HIV or idiopathic), and these subtypes differ in prognosis and management, with HIV and HHV-8 co-positivity indicating worse outcomes. While human IL-6 in unicentric and idiopathic multicentric disease respond well to IL-6 receptor antagonists, viral IL-6 in HHV-8 associated cases has a limited response. This is the rationale for preferring anti-CD20 therapy with rituximab in these patients.

Conculsions

Correct biopsy specimen, keen analysis of distinct pathologic features, and HHV-8 testing on tissue sample guide the diagnosis as HHV-8 serology can be falsely negative.

Introduction

Castleman disease (CD) is a rare non-neoplastic disorder presenting as lymphadenopathy. Skin involvement and progression to lymphomas are uncommon, and such presentation can pose a diagnostic challenge. We describe an interesting case of multicentric CD presenting as a rash.

Case Description

A 79-year-old male presented with a 1-year history of blanchable maculopapular rash and new onset dyspnea in the absence of fever, fatigue or weight loss. Examination revealed axillary, cervical and inguinal lymphadenopathy, and firm splenomegaly. Initial labs were notable for leukocytosis, occasional lymphoplasmacytic cells, anemia, thrombocytopenia, negative HIV screen, and elevated ESR and LDH. Further testing identified polyclonal hypergammaglobulinemia. CT scans revealed generalized lymphadenopathy, splenomegaly with infarcts and unilateral pleural effusion. An inguinal lymph node needle biopsy, skin biopsy and pleural fluid cytology were concerning for lymphoplasmacytic, so he was started on rituximab and bendamustine. However, B cell clonality could not be demonstrated, making these findings concerning for Castleman disease.

Results

Human herpesvirus 8 (HHV-8) testing performed on the inguinal lymph node sample came out positive, and he was diagnosed with HHV-8 positive multicentric Castleman disease and continued on weekly rituximab. He demonstrated an excellent response with complete resolution of rash, palpable lymphadenopathy and anemia after 4 cycles of treatment.

Discussion

Castleman disease (CD) is a rare disorder of polyclonal B cell proliferation classically presenting as lymphadenopathy with constitutional symptoms. Cutaneous presentations include eruptive angiomas or petechial rash but can be variable. Intrinsic or viral IL-6 play a key role in the pathogenesis of the disease. CD can be localised or multicentric (related to HHV-8 +/- HIV or idiopathic), and these subtypes differ in prognosis and management, with HIV and HHV-8 co-positivity indicating worse outcomes. While human IL-6 in unicentric and idiopathic multicentric disease respond well to IL-6 receptor antagonists, viral IL-6 in HHV-8 associated cases has a limited response. This is the rationale for preferring anti-CD20 therapy with rituximab in these patients.

Conculsions

Correct biopsy specimen, keen analysis of distinct pathologic features, and HHV-8 testing on tissue sample guide the diagnosis as HHV-8 serology can be falsely negative.

Issue
Federal Practitioner - 39(4)s
Issue
Federal Practitioner - 39(4)s
Page Number
S17
Page Number
S17
Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Sections
Disallow All Ads
Content Gating
No Gating (article Unlocked/Free)
Alternative CME
Disqus Comments
Default
Gate On Date
Tue, 08/30/2022 - 15:00
Un-Gate On Date
Tue, 08/30/2022 - 15:00
Use ProPublica
CFC Schedule Remove Status
Tue, 08/30/2022 - 15:00
Hide sidebar & use full width
render the right sidebar.
Conference Recap Checkbox
Not Conference Recap
Clinical Edge
Display the Slideshow in this Article
Medscape Article
Display survey writer
Reuters content
Disable Inline Native ads
WebMD Article

Nodular Sclerosing Hodgkin Lymphoma With Paraneoplastic Cerebellar Degeneration

Article Type
Changed
Thu, 12/15/2022 - 14:29

Paraneoplastic syndrome is a rare disorder involving manifestations of immune dysregulation triggered by malignancy. The immune system develops antibodies to the malignancy, which can cause cross reactivation with various tissues in the body, resulting in an autoimmune response. Paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration (PCD) is a rare condition caused by immune-mediated damage to the Purkinje cells of the cerebellar tract. Symptoms may include gait instability, double vision, decreased fine motor skills, and ataxia, with progression to brainstem-associated symptoms, such as nystagmus, dysarthria, and dysphagia. Early detection and treatment of the underlying malignancy is critical to halt the progression of autoimmune-mediated destruction. We present a case of a young adult female patient with PCD caused by Purkinje cell cytoplasmic–Tr (PCA-Tr) antibody with Hodgkin lymphoma.

Case Presentation

A 20-year-old previously healthy active-duty female patient presented to the emergency department with acute worsening of chronic intermittent, recurrent episodes of lightheadedness and vertigo. Symptoms persisted for 9 months until acutely worsening over the 2 weeks prior to presentation. She reported left eye double vision but did not report seeing spots, photophobia, tinnitus, or headache. She felt off-balance, leaning on nearby objects to remain standing. Symptoms primarily occurred during ambulation; however, occasionally they happened at rest. Episodes lasted up to several minutes and occurred up to 15 times a day. The patient reported no fever, night sweats, unexplained weight loss, muscle aches, weakness, numbness or tingling, loss of bowel or bladder function, or rash. She had no recent illnesses, changes to medications, or recent travel. Oral intake to include food and water was adequate and unchanged. The patient had a remote history of mild concussions without loss of consciousness while playing sports 4 years previously. She reported no recent trauma. Nine months before, she received treatment for benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV) with the Epley maneuver with full resolution of symptoms lasting several days. She reported no prescription or over-the-counter medications, herbal remedies, or supplements. She reported no other medical or surgical history and no pertinent social or family history.

Physical examination revealed a nontoxic-appearing female patient with intermittent conversational dysarthria, saccadic pursuits, horizontal nystagmus with lateral gaze, and vertical nystagmus with vertical gaze. The patient exhibited dysdiadochokinesia, or impaired ability to perform rapid alternating hand movements with repetition. Finger-to-nose testing was impaired and heel-to-shin motion remained intact. A Romberg test was positive, and the patient had tandem gait instability. Strength testing, sensation, reflexes, and cranial nerves were otherwise intact. Initial laboratory testing was unremarkable except for mild normocytic anemia. Her infectious workup, including testing for venereal disease, HIV, COVID-19, and Coccidioidies was negative. Heavy metals analysis and urine drug screen were negative. Ophthalmology was consulted and workup revealed small amplitude downbeat nystagmus in primary gaze, sustained gaze evoked lateral beating jerk nystagmus with rebound nystagmus R>L gaze, but there was no evidence of afferent package defect and optic nerve function remained intact. Magnetic resonance imaging of the brain demonstrated cerebellar vermis hypoplasia with prominence of the superior cerebellar folia. Due to concerns for autoimmune encephalitis, a lumbar puncture was performed. Antibody testing revealed PCA-Tr antibodies, which is commonly associated with Hodgkin lymphoma, prompting further evaluation for malignancy.

Computed tomography (CT) of the chest with contrast demonstrated multiple mediastinal masses with a conglomeration of lymph nodes along the right paratracheal region. Further evaluation was performed with a positron emission tomography (PET)–CT, revealing a large conglomeration of hypermetabolic pretracheal, mediastinal, and right supraclavicular lymph that were suggestive of lymphoma. Mediastinoscopy with excisional lymph node biopsy was performed with immunohistochemical staining confirming diagnosis of a nodular sclerosing variant of Hodgkin lymphoma. The patient was treated with IV immunoglobulin at 0.4g/kg daily for 5 days. A central venous catheter was placed into the patient’s right internal jugular vein and a chemotherapy regimen of doxorubicin 46 mg, vinblastine 11 mg, bleomycin 19 units, and dacarbazine 700 mg was initiated. The patient’s symptoms improved with resolution of dysarthria; however, her visual impairment and gait instability persisted. Repeat PET-CT imaging 2 months later revealed interval improvement with decreased intensity and extent of the hypermetabolic lymph nodes and no new hypermetabolic foci.

Discussion

PCA-Tr antibodies affect the delta/notchlike epidermal growth factor–related receptor, expressed on the dendrites of cerebellar Purkinje cells.1 These fibers are the only output neurons of the cerebellar cortex and are critical to the coordination of motor movements, accounting for the ataxia experienced by patients with this subtype of PCD.2 The link between Hodgkin lymphoma and PCA-Tr antibodies has been established; however, most reports involve men with a median age of 61 years with lymphoma-associated symptoms (such as lymphadenopathy) or systemic symptoms (fever, night sweats, or weight loss) preceding neurologic manifestations in 80% of cases.3

Our patient was a young, previously healthy adult female who initially presented with vertigo, a common concern with frequently benign origins. Although there was temporary resolution of symptoms after Epley maneuvers, symptoms recurred and progressed over several months to include brainstem manifestations of nystagmus, diplopia, and dysarthria. Previous reports indicate that after remission of the Hodgkin lymphoma, PCA-Tr antibodies disappear and symptoms can improve or resolve.4,5 Treatment has just begun for our patient and although there has been initial clinical improvement, given the chronicity of symptoms, it is unclear if complete resolution will be achieved.

Conclusions

PCD can result in debilitating neurologic dysfunction and may be associated with malignancy such as Hodgkin lymphoma. This case offers unique insight due to the patient’s demographics and presentation, which involved brainstem pathology typically associated with late-onset disease and preceded by constitutional symptoms. Clinical suspicion of this rare disorder should be considered in all ages, especially if symptoms are progressive or neurologic manifestations arise, as early detection and treatment of the underlying malignancy are paramount to the prevention of significant disability.

References

1. de Graaff E, Maat P, Hulsenboom E, et al. Identification of delta/notch-like epidermal growth factor-related receptor as the Tr antigen in paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration. Ann Neurol. 2012;71(6):815-824. doi:10.1002/ana.23550

2. MacKenzie-Graham A, Tiwari-Woodruff SK, Sharma G, et al. Purkinje cell loss in experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis. Neuroimage. 2009;48(4):637-651. doi:10.1016/j.neuroimage.2009.06.073

3. Bernal F, Shams’ili S, Rojas I, et al. Anti-Tr antibodies as markers of paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration and Hodgkin’s disease. Neurology. 2003;60(2):230-234. doi:10.1212/01.wnl.0000041495.87539.98

4. Graus F, Ariño H, Dalmau J. Paraneoplastic neurological syndromes in Hodgkin and non-Hodgkin lymphomas. Blood. 2014;123(21):3230-3238. doi:10.1182/blood-2014-03-537506

5. Aly R, Emmady PD. Paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration. Updated May 8, 2022. Accessed March 30, 2022. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK560638

Article PDF
Author and Disclosure Information

LCDR Denise Teh, DOa; LT Hunter Culp, MDb; and Aaron Venable, MDa
Correspondence: 
Hunter Culp (hunteraculp@gmail.com)

aNaval Medical Center San Diego, California
bUniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, Maryland

Author disclosures

The authors report no actual or potential conflicts of interest or outside funding with regard to this article.

Disclaimer

The opinions expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of Federal Practitioner, Frontline Medical Communications Inc., the US Government, or any of its agencies.

Ethics and consent

Written informed consent was obtained from the patient.

Issue
Federal Practitioner - 39(3)s
Publications
Topics
Page Number
S18-S19
Sections
Author and Disclosure Information

LCDR Denise Teh, DOa; LT Hunter Culp, MDb; and Aaron Venable, MDa
Correspondence: 
Hunter Culp (hunteraculp@gmail.com)

aNaval Medical Center San Diego, California
bUniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, Maryland

Author disclosures

The authors report no actual or potential conflicts of interest or outside funding with regard to this article.

Disclaimer

The opinions expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of Federal Practitioner, Frontline Medical Communications Inc., the US Government, or any of its agencies.

Ethics and consent

Written informed consent was obtained from the patient.

Author and Disclosure Information

LCDR Denise Teh, DOa; LT Hunter Culp, MDb; and Aaron Venable, MDa
Correspondence: 
Hunter Culp (hunteraculp@gmail.com)

aNaval Medical Center San Diego, California
bUniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, Maryland

Author disclosures

The authors report no actual or potential conflicts of interest or outside funding with regard to this article.

Disclaimer

The opinions expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of Federal Practitioner, Frontline Medical Communications Inc., the US Government, or any of its agencies.

Ethics and consent

Written informed consent was obtained from the patient.

Article PDF
Article PDF

Paraneoplastic syndrome is a rare disorder involving manifestations of immune dysregulation triggered by malignancy. The immune system develops antibodies to the malignancy, which can cause cross reactivation with various tissues in the body, resulting in an autoimmune response. Paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration (PCD) is a rare condition caused by immune-mediated damage to the Purkinje cells of the cerebellar tract. Symptoms may include gait instability, double vision, decreased fine motor skills, and ataxia, with progression to brainstem-associated symptoms, such as nystagmus, dysarthria, and dysphagia. Early detection and treatment of the underlying malignancy is critical to halt the progression of autoimmune-mediated destruction. We present a case of a young adult female patient with PCD caused by Purkinje cell cytoplasmic–Tr (PCA-Tr) antibody with Hodgkin lymphoma.

Case Presentation

A 20-year-old previously healthy active-duty female patient presented to the emergency department with acute worsening of chronic intermittent, recurrent episodes of lightheadedness and vertigo. Symptoms persisted for 9 months until acutely worsening over the 2 weeks prior to presentation. She reported left eye double vision but did not report seeing spots, photophobia, tinnitus, or headache. She felt off-balance, leaning on nearby objects to remain standing. Symptoms primarily occurred during ambulation; however, occasionally they happened at rest. Episodes lasted up to several minutes and occurred up to 15 times a day. The patient reported no fever, night sweats, unexplained weight loss, muscle aches, weakness, numbness or tingling, loss of bowel or bladder function, or rash. She had no recent illnesses, changes to medications, or recent travel. Oral intake to include food and water was adequate and unchanged. The patient had a remote history of mild concussions without loss of consciousness while playing sports 4 years previously. She reported no recent trauma. Nine months before, she received treatment for benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV) with the Epley maneuver with full resolution of symptoms lasting several days. She reported no prescription or over-the-counter medications, herbal remedies, or supplements. She reported no other medical or surgical history and no pertinent social or family history.

Physical examination revealed a nontoxic-appearing female patient with intermittent conversational dysarthria, saccadic pursuits, horizontal nystagmus with lateral gaze, and vertical nystagmus with vertical gaze. The patient exhibited dysdiadochokinesia, or impaired ability to perform rapid alternating hand movements with repetition. Finger-to-nose testing was impaired and heel-to-shin motion remained intact. A Romberg test was positive, and the patient had tandem gait instability. Strength testing, sensation, reflexes, and cranial nerves were otherwise intact. Initial laboratory testing was unremarkable except for mild normocytic anemia. Her infectious workup, including testing for venereal disease, HIV, COVID-19, and Coccidioidies was negative. Heavy metals analysis and urine drug screen were negative. Ophthalmology was consulted and workup revealed small amplitude downbeat nystagmus in primary gaze, sustained gaze evoked lateral beating jerk nystagmus with rebound nystagmus R>L gaze, but there was no evidence of afferent package defect and optic nerve function remained intact. Magnetic resonance imaging of the brain demonstrated cerebellar vermis hypoplasia with prominence of the superior cerebellar folia. Due to concerns for autoimmune encephalitis, a lumbar puncture was performed. Antibody testing revealed PCA-Tr antibodies, which is commonly associated with Hodgkin lymphoma, prompting further evaluation for malignancy.

Computed tomography (CT) of the chest with contrast demonstrated multiple mediastinal masses with a conglomeration of lymph nodes along the right paratracheal region. Further evaluation was performed with a positron emission tomography (PET)–CT, revealing a large conglomeration of hypermetabolic pretracheal, mediastinal, and right supraclavicular lymph that were suggestive of lymphoma. Mediastinoscopy with excisional lymph node biopsy was performed with immunohistochemical staining confirming diagnosis of a nodular sclerosing variant of Hodgkin lymphoma. The patient was treated with IV immunoglobulin at 0.4g/kg daily for 5 days. A central venous catheter was placed into the patient’s right internal jugular vein and a chemotherapy regimen of doxorubicin 46 mg, vinblastine 11 mg, bleomycin 19 units, and dacarbazine 700 mg was initiated. The patient’s symptoms improved with resolution of dysarthria; however, her visual impairment and gait instability persisted. Repeat PET-CT imaging 2 months later revealed interval improvement with decreased intensity and extent of the hypermetabolic lymph nodes and no new hypermetabolic foci.

Discussion

PCA-Tr antibodies affect the delta/notchlike epidermal growth factor–related receptor, expressed on the dendrites of cerebellar Purkinje cells.1 These fibers are the only output neurons of the cerebellar cortex and are critical to the coordination of motor movements, accounting for the ataxia experienced by patients with this subtype of PCD.2 The link between Hodgkin lymphoma and PCA-Tr antibodies has been established; however, most reports involve men with a median age of 61 years with lymphoma-associated symptoms (such as lymphadenopathy) or systemic symptoms (fever, night sweats, or weight loss) preceding neurologic manifestations in 80% of cases.3

Our patient was a young, previously healthy adult female who initially presented with vertigo, a common concern with frequently benign origins. Although there was temporary resolution of symptoms after Epley maneuvers, symptoms recurred and progressed over several months to include brainstem manifestations of nystagmus, diplopia, and dysarthria. Previous reports indicate that after remission of the Hodgkin lymphoma, PCA-Tr antibodies disappear and symptoms can improve or resolve.4,5 Treatment has just begun for our patient and although there has been initial clinical improvement, given the chronicity of symptoms, it is unclear if complete resolution will be achieved.

Conclusions

PCD can result in debilitating neurologic dysfunction and may be associated with malignancy such as Hodgkin lymphoma. This case offers unique insight due to the patient’s demographics and presentation, which involved brainstem pathology typically associated with late-onset disease and preceded by constitutional symptoms. Clinical suspicion of this rare disorder should be considered in all ages, especially if symptoms are progressive or neurologic manifestations arise, as early detection and treatment of the underlying malignancy are paramount to the prevention of significant disability.

Paraneoplastic syndrome is a rare disorder involving manifestations of immune dysregulation triggered by malignancy. The immune system develops antibodies to the malignancy, which can cause cross reactivation with various tissues in the body, resulting in an autoimmune response. Paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration (PCD) is a rare condition caused by immune-mediated damage to the Purkinje cells of the cerebellar tract. Symptoms may include gait instability, double vision, decreased fine motor skills, and ataxia, with progression to brainstem-associated symptoms, such as nystagmus, dysarthria, and dysphagia. Early detection and treatment of the underlying malignancy is critical to halt the progression of autoimmune-mediated destruction. We present a case of a young adult female patient with PCD caused by Purkinje cell cytoplasmic–Tr (PCA-Tr) antibody with Hodgkin lymphoma.

Case Presentation

A 20-year-old previously healthy active-duty female patient presented to the emergency department with acute worsening of chronic intermittent, recurrent episodes of lightheadedness and vertigo. Symptoms persisted for 9 months until acutely worsening over the 2 weeks prior to presentation. She reported left eye double vision but did not report seeing spots, photophobia, tinnitus, or headache. She felt off-balance, leaning on nearby objects to remain standing. Symptoms primarily occurred during ambulation; however, occasionally they happened at rest. Episodes lasted up to several minutes and occurred up to 15 times a day. The patient reported no fever, night sweats, unexplained weight loss, muscle aches, weakness, numbness or tingling, loss of bowel or bladder function, or rash. She had no recent illnesses, changes to medications, or recent travel. Oral intake to include food and water was adequate and unchanged. The patient had a remote history of mild concussions without loss of consciousness while playing sports 4 years previously. She reported no recent trauma. Nine months before, she received treatment for benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV) with the Epley maneuver with full resolution of symptoms lasting several days. She reported no prescription or over-the-counter medications, herbal remedies, or supplements. She reported no other medical or surgical history and no pertinent social or family history.

Physical examination revealed a nontoxic-appearing female patient with intermittent conversational dysarthria, saccadic pursuits, horizontal nystagmus with lateral gaze, and vertical nystagmus with vertical gaze. The patient exhibited dysdiadochokinesia, or impaired ability to perform rapid alternating hand movements with repetition. Finger-to-nose testing was impaired and heel-to-shin motion remained intact. A Romberg test was positive, and the patient had tandem gait instability. Strength testing, sensation, reflexes, and cranial nerves were otherwise intact. Initial laboratory testing was unremarkable except for mild normocytic anemia. Her infectious workup, including testing for venereal disease, HIV, COVID-19, and Coccidioidies was negative. Heavy metals analysis and urine drug screen were negative. Ophthalmology was consulted and workup revealed small amplitude downbeat nystagmus in primary gaze, sustained gaze evoked lateral beating jerk nystagmus with rebound nystagmus R>L gaze, but there was no evidence of afferent package defect and optic nerve function remained intact. Magnetic resonance imaging of the brain demonstrated cerebellar vermis hypoplasia with prominence of the superior cerebellar folia. Due to concerns for autoimmune encephalitis, a lumbar puncture was performed. Antibody testing revealed PCA-Tr antibodies, which is commonly associated with Hodgkin lymphoma, prompting further evaluation for malignancy.

Computed tomography (CT) of the chest with contrast demonstrated multiple mediastinal masses with a conglomeration of lymph nodes along the right paratracheal region. Further evaluation was performed with a positron emission tomography (PET)–CT, revealing a large conglomeration of hypermetabolic pretracheal, mediastinal, and right supraclavicular lymph that were suggestive of lymphoma. Mediastinoscopy with excisional lymph node biopsy was performed with immunohistochemical staining confirming diagnosis of a nodular sclerosing variant of Hodgkin lymphoma. The patient was treated with IV immunoglobulin at 0.4g/kg daily for 5 days. A central venous catheter was placed into the patient’s right internal jugular vein and a chemotherapy regimen of doxorubicin 46 mg, vinblastine 11 mg, bleomycin 19 units, and dacarbazine 700 mg was initiated. The patient’s symptoms improved with resolution of dysarthria; however, her visual impairment and gait instability persisted. Repeat PET-CT imaging 2 months later revealed interval improvement with decreased intensity and extent of the hypermetabolic lymph nodes and no new hypermetabolic foci.

Discussion

PCA-Tr antibodies affect the delta/notchlike epidermal growth factor–related receptor, expressed on the dendrites of cerebellar Purkinje cells.1 These fibers are the only output neurons of the cerebellar cortex and are critical to the coordination of motor movements, accounting for the ataxia experienced by patients with this subtype of PCD.2 The link between Hodgkin lymphoma and PCA-Tr antibodies has been established; however, most reports involve men with a median age of 61 years with lymphoma-associated symptoms (such as lymphadenopathy) or systemic symptoms (fever, night sweats, or weight loss) preceding neurologic manifestations in 80% of cases.3

Our patient was a young, previously healthy adult female who initially presented with vertigo, a common concern with frequently benign origins. Although there was temporary resolution of symptoms after Epley maneuvers, symptoms recurred and progressed over several months to include brainstem manifestations of nystagmus, diplopia, and dysarthria. Previous reports indicate that after remission of the Hodgkin lymphoma, PCA-Tr antibodies disappear and symptoms can improve or resolve.4,5 Treatment has just begun for our patient and although there has been initial clinical improvement, given the chronicity of symptoms, it is unclear if complete resolution will be achieved.

Conclusions

PCD can result in debilitating neurologic dysfunction and may be associated with malignancy such as Hodgkin lymphoma. This case offers unique insight due to the patient’s demographics and presentation, which involved brainstem pathology typically associated with late-onset disease and preceded by constitutional symptoms. Clinical suspicion of this rare disorder should be considered in all ages, especially if symptoms are progressive or neurologic manifestations arise, as early detection and treatment of the underlying malignancy are paramount to the prevention of significant disability.

References

1. de Graaff E, Maat P, Hulsenboom E, et al. Identification of delta/notch-like epidermal growth factor-related receptor as the Tr antigen in paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration. Ann Neurol. 2012;71(6):815-824. doi:10.1002/ana.23550

2. MacKenzie-Graham A, Tiwari-Woodruff SK, Sharma G, et al. Purkinje cell loss in experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis. Neuroimage. 2009;48(4):637-651. doi:10.1016/j.neuroimage.2009.06.073

3. Bernal F, Shams’ili S, Rojas I, et al. Anti-Tr antibodies as markers of paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration and Hodgkin’s disease. Neurology. 2003;60(2):230-234. doi:10.1212/01.wnl.0000041495.87539.98

4. Graus F, Ariño H, Dalmau J. Paraneoplastic neurological syndromes in Hodgkin and non-Hodgkin lymphomas. Blood. 2014;123(21):3230-3238. doi:10.1182/blood-2014-03-537506

5. Aly R, Emmady PD. Paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration. Updated May 8, 2022. Accessed March 30, 2022. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK560638

References

1. de Graaff E, Maat P, Hulsenboom E, et al. Identification of delta/notch-like epidermal growth factor-related receptor as the Tr antigen in paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration. Ann Neurol. 2012;71(6):815-824. doi:10.1002/ana.23550

2. MacKenzie-Graham A, Tiwari-Woodruff SK, Sharma G, et al. Purkinje cell loss in experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis. Neuroimage. 2009;48(4):637-651. doi:10.1016/j.neuroimage.2009.06.073

3. Bernal F, Shams’ili S, Rojas I, et al. Anti-Tr antibodies as markers of paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration and Hodgkin’s disease. Neurology. 2003;60(2):230-234. doi:10.1212/01.wnl.0000041495.87539.98

4. Graus F, Ariño H, Dalmau J. Paraneoplastic neurological syndromes in Hodgkin and non-Hodgkin lymphomas. Blood. 2014;123(21):3230-3238. doi:10.1182/blood-2014-03-537506

5. Aly R, Emmady PD. Paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration. Updated May 8, 2022. Accessed March 30, 2022. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK560638

Issue
Federal Practitioner - 39(3)s
Issue
Federal Practitioner - 39(3)s
Page Number
S18-S19
Page Number
S18-S19
Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Sections
Disallow All Ads
Content Gating
No Gating (article Unlocked/Free)
Alternative CME
Disqus Comments
Default
Use ProPublica
Hide sidebar & use full width
render the right sidebar.
Conference Recap Checkbox
Not Conference Recap
Clinical Edge
Display the Slideshow in this Article
Medscape Article
Display survey writer
Reuters content
Disable Inline Native ads
WebMD Article
Article PDF Media