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Toxicities of Chemotherapy

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Variation in which cell lines are most suppressed. ... neuropathy: ileus, bladder atony, impotence, and orthostatic hypotension; ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Toxicities of Chemotherapy


1
Toxicities of Chemotherapy
  • Drug toxicity is often a diagnosis of exclusion.
  • Dose, schedule, and combination make a
    difference.
  • Not all toxicities are known.
  • Treatment is supportive.

2
Myelosuppression (1)
3
Myelosuppression (2)
  • Granulocytes then platelet then RBC.
  • Variation in which cell lines are most
    suppressed.
  • Pelvic or spinal radiation or multiple courses of
    C/T will suffer more severe and prolonged
    myelosuppression
  • Other causes of cytopenia cancer infiltration in
    the marrow, other drug toxicity, sepsis.

4
Drugs which cause mucositis
5
Mucositis (1)
  • Whole GI tract, from mouth to rectum, is
    susceptible.
  • Mild mouth sores to severe bloody diarrhea.
  • Breakdown of the mucosal barrier ? portal for the
    entry of infectious agents.
  • High dose C/T with or without R/T frequent cause
    severe mucositis.
  • Candida and herpes viruses cause or worsen
    stomatitis C. difficile ? pseudomembranous
    colitis

6
Mucositis (2) treatment
  • Keep mouse clean with soft swabs, saline, or
    chlorhexidene gluconate (scodyl).
  • Topical anesthetics salcoat, dexaltin
  • Systemic narcotics
  • Parenteral nutrition

7
Pulmonary toxicity (1)
  • Pneumonitis/fibrosis, acute pleuritic pain,
    hypersensitivity, pulmonary edema.
  • Dyspnea, dry cough, fatigue, fever.
  • Acute presentation appears gradually over
    several weeks. DD with infection, radiation,
    cardiogenic edema, pulmonary embolus, hemorrhage,
    leukoagglutinin reaction, and progressive tumor.

8
Pulmonary toxicity (2)
  • Pathology endothelial cell swelling, necrosis of
    type I pneumocytes, atypical proliferation of
    type II cells, generalized fibrosis in end-stage.
  • CXR normal diffuse reticulonodular pattern, or
    mass-like lesion (bleomycin), pleural effusion or
    hilar LAP (MTX).
  • Biopsy ? Controversial.
  • Treatment supportive. Steroid ?

9
Pulmonary toxicity (3)
  • Bleomycin risk factors gt450500 mg, age gt 70,
    prior or concomitant R/T, CTX, Bolus rather
    than infusion.
  • O2 may be harmful, use it only when necessary.

10
Cardiovascular toxicity (1)
  • Rare Sporadic (most cardiac events in cancer
    patients are related to preexisting cardiac
    disease or tumor involvement)
  • Anthracyclines (doxorubicin, daunorubicin,
    epirubicin, idarubicin)
  • ECG changes (40 doxorubicine users) ST-T, APC,
    VPC, ST (transient), decrease QRS voltage (may be
    permanent)
  • Only very rarely sudden death, no needs to
    discontinue drug.

11
Cardiovascular toxicity (2) Myocardial ischemia
and Infarction
  • Very rarely.
  • R/T accelerated atherosclerosis, symptomatic
    years later.
  • Vinca alkaloid bleomycin some incidences of
    AMI.
  • 5-FU, 4 anginal symptoms.
  • Nitrates and calcium channel blockers helpful.

12
Cardiovascular toxicity (3) Cardiomyopathy and
Pericarditis
  • Anthracyclines and high dose CTX may produce
    fatal cardiomyopathy.
  • Acute drop in EF (hrs wks), pericardial
    effusion, CHF.
  • Chronic cardiomyopathy (doxorubicin 550 mg/m2 1
    10)
  • Symptoms nonspecific, tachycardia, dyspnea,
    cardiomegaly, peripheral and pulmonary edema.
  • EM myofibrillar loss and sarcoplasmic dilatation
    with coalescence into cytoplasmic vaculoes

13
Cardiovascular toxicity (4) Cardiomyopathy and
Pericarditis
  • Occurs in 30 days 1 year after treatment.
  • Reversible and irreversible CHF, may be fatal.
  • No specific therapy (ICRF-187 ?), only
    supportive.
  • Further use of doxorubicn is contraindicated.

14
Cardiovascular toxicity (5) CTX
  • 1.55 g/m2 severe hemorrhagic myopericarditis.
  • Onset within 48 hr.
  • Patients rapidly die of cardiogenic shock.
  • Edema, tachycardia and tachycardia, 7 10 days
    after therapy. May have decreases in QRS voltage.
  • Treatment is supportive. Survive the acute phase
    may have complete recovery.

15
Neurotoxicity (1)
  • Rarely severe enough to be admitted to ICU.
  • Consider other causes tumor, steroids,
    metoclopramide, benzodiazepine.
  • Acute Cerebellar Syndrome

16
Neurotoxicity (2) Acute Encephalopathy
17
Neurotoxicity (3)
  • Acute Paraplegia
  • IT cytarabine, MTX, Thio-TEPA acute reversible
    arachnoiditis, paralysis exceedingly rarely, may
    or may not be reversible.
  • Other Neuropathies
  • Cisplatin dose-dependent, ototoxicty distal
    sensory neuropathyataxia.
  • Etoposide anecdotal, mild distal paresthesias
    DTR depression.
  • Vinca alkaloids, symmetrical areflexia, distal
    paresthesias symmetrical motor weakness, jaw
    pain, cranial nerve palsies, paralytic ileus.
  • Procarbazine 1020, decreased DTR, mild distal
    paresthesias usually reversible.

18
Neurotoxicity (4)Vinca Alkaloids
  • SIADH
  • Peripheral neuropathy symmetric mixed
    sensorimotor neuropathy quadriparesis dose
    related and gradual onset No treatment.
    Transient muscle pain.
  • Cranial nerve palsies vocal cord paralysis,
    dysphagia, optic atrophy, ptosis,
    ophthalmoplegias or fascial nerve paralysis
    abrupt onset, bilateral, usually reversible.
  • Autonomic neuropathy ileus, bladder atony,
    impotence, and orthostatic hypotension usually
    reversible, may need NG tube drainage.

19
Neurotoxicity (5) L-asparaginase
  • Incidence 2550
  • Mild depression, drowsiness to confusion, stupor,
    and coma.
  • Rapid onset, clears rapidly after the end of
    therapy.
  • Cause unknown, some cases due to clotting
    abnormalities.

20
Neurotoxicity (6)Cytosine arabinoside
  • Seen in high dose (23 g/m2 bid).
  • High risk groups gt 55 y/o, larger cumulative
    dose.
  • Cerebellar changes are more severe than cerebral
    ones.
  • Onset 57 days
  • Signs intention tremor, dysarthria, horizontal
    nystagmus limb and truncal ataxia (even unable
    to walk or eat) somnolence, disorientation,
    memory loss, seizure and coma.
  • May abate over days weeks, may be irreversible,
    even fatal.

21
Neurotoxicity (7) Methotrexate
  • Seen in high dose (17 g/m2 ).
  • Incidence 215.
  • Onset hours weeks.
  • Signs develop abruptly, resemble a stroke
    (hemiplegia, speech disorder), focal or
    generalized serzures. Recover over several days.
  • Supportive care.
  • Intrathecal MTX can cause acute arachnoiditis,
    cranial nerve palsies, paralysis, or seizures.
    Recovery is often but not always.
  • Necrotizing leukoencephalopathy begins
    insidiously months after treatment.

22
Renal and Urinary ToxicityCisplatin
  • Focal necrosis of the distal tubules and
    collecting ducts.
  • Creatinine rises a few days after therapy, peaks
    at 314 days
  • Renal magnesium wasting, hypocalcemia,
    hypokalemia,
  • Management iv or im Mg, and other supportive.

23
Renal and Urinary ToxicityMTX
  • Usually reversible over 23 weeks.
  • Impaired renal excretion cause profound cytopenia
    and mucositis.
  • Patients with third space fluid reservoir
    (pleural effusion or ascites) may have prolonged
    toxicities due to slow release MTX into
    circulation.

24
Renal and Urinary Toxicity CTX (1)
  • Bladder fibrosis, bladder cancer, hemorrhagic
    cystitis
  • Hemorrhagic cystitis idiosyncrasy, high
    incidence in prolonged or high dose therapy also
    high in ifosfamide.
  • Prevention mesna (sulfhydryl group neutralize
    acrolein) adequate prehydration (NS furosemide
    ) with frequent voiding notice SIADH.
  • Clinical presentation
  • Onset within few days.
  • Hematuria, dysuria, urinary urgency the bleeding
    usually stops after 1 month.

25
Renal and Urinary ToxicityCTX (2)
  • Treatment
  • Stop CTX.
  • Vigorous hydration.
  • Adequate platelet.
  • Constant bladder irrigation.
  • Instillation of Alum, prostaglandin analogue,
    formalin (severe pain).
  • Urinary diversion.

26
HepatotoxicityVOD (1)
  • 20 incidence in high dose C/T or CR/T prior to
    BMT high mortality.
  • Resembles Budd-Chiari syndrome.
  • Dx two of the triad jaundice (out of proportion
    to GOT elevation), hepatomegaly or RUQ pain,
    ascites.
  • Symptoms onset 10 days after BMT.
  • Complications coagulopathy, encephalopathy,
    fluid overload, and organ failure.
  • Death (if occurs) day 35. Mortality 50.

27
HepatotoxicityVOD (2)
  • Pathology subintimal edema, hemorrhage, and
    fibrosis within small central venules and
    centrilobular congestion fibrosis.
  • Clinical diagnosis is 90 accurate. Biopsy not
    indicated.
  • No effective treatment supportive for hepatic
    failure.

28
Interferon- a (1)
  • Indication CML, renal cell carcinoma, hairy cell
    leukemia, low-grade lymphoma.
  • Flu like symptoms malaise, myalgias, headaches,
    tachycardia, chills, and fever.
  • Begins within 6 hours and lasts 48 hours.
  • The intensity will decrease or even disappear
    after 12 weeks.
  • Chronic fatigue syndrome may occur after
    prolonged therapy.
  • Cardiac toxicity (idiosyncrasy) acute
    arrhythmias, myocardial infarction, and sudden
    death, and congestive cardiomyopathy.
  • High dose (gt 100MU) acute reversible
    neurological toxicity lethargy, confusion, and
    seizures.
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