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Moderate/ Severe Pleural Effusion As a Side Effect in Very Old Chronic Myeloid Leukemia (CML) Patients Undergoing Imatinib Treatment
Abstract 4445 Imatinib advent has provided for old CML patients too a chance for an effective treatment, aimed at complete cytogenetic and major molecular response. Indeed, a few studies reported in patients more than 65 year old a response rate comparable to that observed in younger ones. However,...
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Published in: | Blood 2011-11, Vol.118 (21), p.4445-4445 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Abstract 4445
Imatinib advent has provided for old CML patients too a chance for an effective treatment, aimed at complete cytogenetic and major molecular response. Indeed, a few studies reported in patients more than 65 year old a response rate comparable to that observed in younger ones. However, fluid retention, a common side effect of imatinib therapy, seems to occur more frequently in elderly patients. Indeed, periorbital and ankle oedema are common patients' complaints, whereas pleural effusions have not been usually observed in imatinib-treated patients. Conversely, pleural effusions (usually mild to moderate) occur in about 14% of patients treated with the second generation tyrosine-kynase inhibitor (TKI) dasatinib at the optimal dosage of 100 mg by single daily administration. We conducted a retrospective survey of 181 Italian CML patients, above the age of 75, treated with imatinib for chronic phase CML. Among sixty-five patients who were more than 80 year old we observed 5 cases (7.7%) who displayed a severe (grade 3: 4 patients) or moderate (grade 2: 1 patient) pleural effusion. Conversely, such a side effect was not observed in any of the 101 slightly younger (75–80 year old) patients. The 5 patients displaying a pleural effusion were all males, 80.3 – 88.7 year old at the time of imatinib start. One patient was in late chronic phase, and had received hydroxyurea for more than 2 years before imatinib start, whereas the other 4 started imatinib therapy within 2 months from diagnosis. All 5 patients had at least one cardiovascular co-morbidity. Pleural effusion developed after 3–8 months of imatinib therapy. Pericardial effusion and peripheral oedema were also evident in two and one of the 5 patients, respectively. Imatinib was definitely discontinued in 2 patients (one of them had cytogenetically resistant disease) whereas the drug could be resumed, after a few months of interruption, in the other 3, in one case after intolerance to second generation TKI nilotinib. Three patients died: two of myocardial infarction and one for CML blastic phase at 45, 31 and 54 months, respectively, from diagnosis. Two patients are alive, one in major cytogenetic response with resumed imatinib treatment, at 12 and 30 months from diagnosis. Our survey evidenced a significant percentage of very old patients who developed a pleural effusion during imatinib treatment. Although our casistic of patients with pleural effusion is small, some differences are evident, com |
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ISSN: | 0006-4971 1528-0020 |
DOI: | 10.1182/blood.V118.21.4445.4445 |