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A retrospective analysis of 3954 patients in phase 2/3 trials of bortezomib for the treatment of multiple myeloma: towards providing a benchmark for the cardiac safety profile of proteasome inhibition in multiple myeloma.

Authors :
Laubach JP
Moslehi JJ
Francis SA
San Miguel JF
Sonneveld P
Orlowski RZ
Moreau P
Rosiñol L
Faber EA Jr
Voorhees P
Mateos MV
Marquez L
Feng H
Desai A
van de Velde H
Elliott J
Shi H
Dow E
Jobanputra N
Esseltine DL
Niculescu L
Anderson KC
Lonial S
Richardson PG
Source :
British journal of haematology [Br J Haematol] 2017 Aug; Vol. 178 (4), pp. 547-560. Date of Electronic Publication: 2017 May 03.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

This retrospective analysis aimed to establish the overall cardiac safety profile of bortezomib using patient-level data from one phase 2 and seven phase 3 studies in previously untreated and relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma (MM). Seven clinically relevant primary [congestive heart failure (CHF), arrhythmias, ischaemic heart disease (IHD), cardiac death] and secondary (hypertension, dyspnoea, oedema) cardiac endpoints were defined based on MedDRA v16.0 preferred terms. 2509 bortezomib-treated patients and 1445 patients in non-bortezomib-based control arms were included. The incidence of grade ≥3 CHF was 1·3-4·0% in studies in relapsed/refractory MM and 1·2-4·7% in previously untreated MM (2·0-7·6% all grades), with no significant differences between bortezomib- and non-bortezomib-based arms in comparative studies. Incidences of arrhythmias (1·3-5·9% grade ≥2; 0·6-4·1% grade ≥3), IHD (1·2-2·9% all grades; 0·4-2·7% grade ≥3) and cardiac death (0-1·4%) were low, with no differences between bortezomib-based and non-bortezomib-based arms. Higher rates of oedema (mostly grade 1/2) were seen in bortezomib-based versus non-bortezomib-based arms in one study and a pooled transplant study analysis. Logistic regression analyses of comparative studies showed no impact on cardiac risk with bortezomib-based versus non-bortezomib-based treatment. Bortezomib-based treatment was associated with low incidences of cardiac events.<br /> (© 2017 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1365-2141
Volume :
178
Issue :
4
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
British journal of haematology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
28466536
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/bjh.14708