Novel targeted therapies are
being approved in clinical trials for many hematologic malignancies. Tumor
lysis syndrome (TLS) is being noticed as a novel side effect of many of these
agents. A recent review
in AJH summarizes the various drugs that have led to TLS as a potential
side effect of targeted therapies.
TLS was most common in drug
trials dealing with patients with acute leukemias, high grade non Hodgkin’s
lymphomas, mantle cell lymphomas, CLL and myeloma. Some of the risk might be
tumor related rather than the drug but below are the drugs that could be
potential TLS promoting.
Incidence of TLS based on
clinical trials for novel targeted therapies
Alvocidib (cyclin dependent
kinase inhibitor) – 42% in poor risk AML patients, 13% in CLL patients
Venetoclax( ABT-199)( small
molecule B cell lymphoma/leukemia 2 inhibitor)- 2.7-8.9% in CLL
Dinaciclib( cyclin dependent
kinase inhibitor)- 15% in patients with AML or ALL and another 15% in CLL
Ibrutinib( Bruton kinase
inhibitor)- 6.7% in CLL patients
Dasatinib( BCR-ABL tyrosine
kinase inhibitors)- 4.2% in patients with ALL
Lenalidomide( immunomodulatory
agent)- 3-4% in CLL patients
Obinutuzumab( anti CD20 agent)-
3-4.8% in CLL patients
Oprozomib( proteasome inhibitor)-
2.4% in various hematologic malignancies
Brentuximab vedotin( anti cd30
antibody)- 1.7% in anaplastic large cell lymphoma patients
Carfilzomib( proteasome inhibitor)-
1% in myeloma patients
Not much found in the two listed below
Idelasib( phosphatidylinositol
3-kinase inhibitor)- No TLS in CLL patients
Ofatumumab( anti CD20 agent)-No
TLS in CLL patients
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