| Literature DB >> 20886011 |
Nektaria Makrilia1, Ekaterini Syrigou, Ioannis Kaklamanos, Leonidas Manolopoulos, Muhammad Wasif Saif.
Abstract
Platinum-containing chemotherapy agents (cisplatin, carboplatin, oxaliplatin) have been approved in the first-line setting of numerous malignancies, such as ovarian, bladder, head and neck, colorectal, and lung cancer. Their extensive use over the last decade has led to a significant increase in the incidence of hypersensitivity reactions, which are defined as unforeseen reactions whose signs and symptoms cannot be explained by the known toxicity of these drugs. Skin rash, flushing, abdominal cramping, itchy palms, and back pain are common symptoms. Cardiovascular and respiratory complications can prove fatal. Multiple pathogenetic mechanisms have been suggested. Hypersensitivity usually appears after multiple infusions, suggesting type I allergic reactions; however, other types of hypersensitivity also seem to be implicated. Several management options are available to treating physicians: discontinuation of chemotherapy, premedication, prolonging of infusion duration, desensitization protocols, and replacement with a different platinum compound after performing skin tests that rule out cross-reactions among platinum agents.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20886011 PMCID: PMC2945654 DOI: 10.1155/2010/207084
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Met Based Drugs ISSN: 0793-0291
Incidence and severity of hypersensitivity to platinum agents.
| Drug | Overall incidence % | Characteristics/Severity |
|---|---|---|
| Cisplatin | 5–20 | (i) Occurs within minutes of infusion start |
| (ii) Mostly between 4th–8th course | ||
| (iii) Increases with concomitant radiation | ||
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| Carboplatin | 1–44 | (i) Occurs within minutes or days from infusion |
| (ii) less than 1% during cycles 1–5 | ||
| (iii) 6.5% in cycle 6 | ||
| (iv) 27% in cycle 7 or more | ||
| (v) 44% in 3rd-line retreatment | ||
| Half of all reactions observed are moderate to severe | ||
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| Oxaliplatin | 10–18.9 | (i) Occurs within minutes/hours from infusion |
| (ii) Mostly after 6th course | ||
| (iii) Grade 3-4 in only 1.6% | ||
| (iv) Severe anaphylaxis mostly in case reports | ||
Types of hypersensitivity reactions, their characteristics, and how they are implicated in platinum agent hypersensitivity.
| Type of hypersensitivity | Antigen | Mediated by | Mechanism | Involved in platinum hypersensitivity | Symptoms related |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| I | Soluble antigen | IgE | Mast cell and basophil degranulation | Carboplatin, Cisplatin, Oxaliplatin (most) | Early onset symptoms: itching, chest pain, rash, anaphylactic reactions |
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| II | Cell- or matrix- associated antigen | IgG, IgM | Phagocyte and NK-cell activation | Oxaliplatin | Hemolysis, thrombocytopenia |
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| III | Soluble antigen | IgG | Immune complexes, Phagocyte and NK-cell activation, complement fixation | Oxaliplatin | Chronic urticaria, joint pain, proteinuria |
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| IV | Soluble or cell-associated antigen | T-cells (TH1, TH2, Cytotoxic T cells) | Macrophage and eosinophil activation, cytotoxicity | Carboplatin, Cisplatin | Delayed reactions, hours or even days after infusion |
Emergency procedures in case of hypersensitivity reactions.
| Emergency procedures in case of hypersensitivity reaction to a platinum agent |
|---|
| (1) Interruption of infusion |
| (2) Administer: i.v. antihistamines (type 1 and 2 histamine receptor antagonists), normal saline infusion, and low-dose corticosteroids |
| (antihistamines are the first to be administered) |
| (3) In case of a more severe reaction (dyspnoea, laryngospasm, bronchospasm): |
| (i) oxygen, bronchodilators |
| (ii) high dose steroids (doses range between 100 and 1000 mg of hydrocortisone) |
| (4) Administer epinephrine in case of hypotension or airway obstruction symptoms |
| (5) Monitoring until symptoms resolve or for several hours later in case of severe hypersensitivity |
Main desensitization protocols for carboplatin-cisplatin hypersensitivity. We observe that all protocols deliver the platinum agent at escalating concentrations and administer premedication.
| Patients | Premedication dose route | Steps | Duration | Success rate | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Abe et al. (2010) [ | 3 (carboplatin replaced by cisplatin after desensitization) | Dexamethasone 20 mg, promethazine 50 mg, ranitidine 50 mg | From 1 : 1000 to 1 : 10 on 1st day (in 3 steps), from 1 : 10 to 1 : 1 on 2nd day (in 2 steps) | 2 days (3 hours on 1st day, 9 hours on 2nd day) | 100% |
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| Gomez et al. (2009) [ | 7 | Dexamethasone at least 20 mg iv 30, clemastine 2 mg iv | From 1 : 1000 to 1 : 1 in 4 steps | 2 hours | 71% |
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| Hesterberg et al. (2009) [ | 30 | Fexofenadine 180 mg po and/or desloratadine 5 mg po BID, Dexamethasone 10 mg po | From 1 : 100 to 1 : 1 (in 8–10 steps) | 11 hours | 99% |
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| Castells et al. (2008) [ | 63 (60 hypersensitive to carboplatin, 3 to cisplatin) | Diphenhydramine or hydroxyzine 25 mg po or iv, famotidine 20 mg iv or ranitidine 50 mg iv, lorazepam (0.5-1 mg po or iv as needed for anxiety) | From 1 : 100 to 1 : 1 in 12 steps | 5.8 hours | Severe reactions in 6% of courses (full target dose with treatment) |
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| Confino-Cohen et al. (2005) [ | 23 | Dexamethasone 8–12 mg iv, ondansetron iv | From 1 : 1000 to 1 : 1 in 4 steps | 6 hours | 86.9% |
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| Lee et al. (2005) [ | 31 (1st desensitization in intensive care unit—subsequent as outpatient) | Diphenhydramine 25 mg iv, famotidine 20 mg iv Lorazepam 1 mg (as needed for anxiety) | From 1 : 100 to 1 : 1 in 12 steps(higher concentrations as outpatient) | 5.8 hours (inpatient) 3.8 hours (outpatient) | 85% courses without symptoms (full target dose with treatment) |
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| Markman et al. (2004) [ | 5 (desensitization and retreatment with carboplatin or cisplatin) | Zileuton 600 mg po QID (5 days), montelukast sodium 10 mg po QD (5 days), indomethacin 50 mg po TID (1 day), albuterol sulfate 8 mg po BID (1 day), famotidine 20 mg iv, dexamethasone 20 mg iv, diphenhydramine 50 mg iv | From 1 : 1000 to 1 : 1 in 4 steps | 90 minutes | 80% |
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| Jones et al. (2003) [ | 5 (carboplatin replaced by cisplatin after desensitization) | Dexamethasone 20 mg po (4 days ), diphenhydramine 50 mg po (4 days), ranitidine 50 mg iv, dexamethasone 20 mg iv, ondansetron 8 mg iv | From 1 : 1000 to 1 : 1 in 4 steps | 2 hours | 60% |
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| Rose et al. (2003) [ | 33 | Dexamethasone 20 mg po or iv 6 hours before, Dexamethasone 20 mg iv and diphenhydramine 50 mg iv 30 minutes before | From 1 : 1000 to 1 : 1 in 4 steps | 16.5 hours | 79% |
BID: twice a day, iv: intravenously, po: by mouth, QD: once a day, QID: four times a day, TID: three times a day.
Castells' 12-step desensitization protocol.
| Step | Solution | Rate (mL/h) | Time (in minutes) | Volume infused per step (mL) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 100-fold dilution of final target concentration | 2.0 | 15 | 0.50 |
| 2 | 5.0 | 15 | 1.25 | |
| 3 | 10.0 | 15 | 2.50 | |
| 4 | 20.0 | 15 | 5.00 | |
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| 5 | 10-fold dilution of final target concentration | 5.0 | 15 | 1.25 |
| 6 | 10.0 | 15 | 2.50 | |
| 7 | 20.0 | 15 | 5.00 | |
| 8 | 40.0 | 15 | 10.00 | |
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| 9 | Concentration was calculated by subtracting the cumulative dose administered in steps 1–8 from the total target dose | 10.0 | 15 | 2.50 |
| 10 | 20.0 | 15 | 5.00 | |
| 11 | 40.0 | 15 | 10.00 | |
| 12 | 75.0 | prolonged to complete target dose | 232.50 | |
Published desensitization protocols for oxaliplatin hypersensitivity. We observe that almost all protocols deliver the platinum agent at escalating concentrations and administer premedication.
| Patients | Premedication-Dose-Route | Steps | Duration | Success rate | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Syrigou et al. (2009) [ | 3 | None | From 1 : 100000 to 1 : 1 in 13 steps | 8 hours | 100% |
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| Castells et al. (2008) [ | 1 | Diphenhydramine or hydroxyzine 25 mg po or iv, famotidine 20 mg iv or ranitidine 50 mg iv, lorazepam (0.5–1 mg po or iv as needed for anxiety) | From 1 : 100 to 1 : 1 in 12 steps | 5.8 hours | 100% |
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| Nozawa et al. (2008) [ | 1 | Famotidine 20 mg iv QD, Dexamethasone 20 mg iv QD, diphenhydramine 50 mg po QID, domperidone 10 mg po QID, hydrocortisone 100 mg iv QD, granistron 3 mg iv QD | From 1 : 10000 to 1 : 1 in 5 steps | 8 hours | 100% |
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| Wrzesinski et al. (2007) [ | 1 | Famotidine 20 mg iv BID, Dexamethasone 20 mg iv QD, diphenhydramine 50 mg iv QD, magnesium sulfate 1 g iv BID, calcium gluconate 1 g iv BID, ondasetron 8 mg iv BID | From 1 : 10000 to 1 : 1 in 5 steps | 6 hours | 100% |
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| Edmondson et al. (2007) [ | 1 | None | From 1 : 10000 to 1 : 2 in 12 steps | 205 minutes | 100% |
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| Herrero et al. (2006)[ | 5 | None | From 0.003 to 0.75 mg/min in several steps | 5-6 hours | 100% |
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| Mis et al. (2005) [ | 1 | Dexamethasone 20 mg iv, prednisolone 20 mg po QID, diphenhydramine 50 mg iv, cimetidine 300 mg iv, magnesium sulfate 1 g iv, calcium gluconate 1 g iv, ondasetron 8 mg iv | From 1 : 10000 to 1 : 1 in 5 steps | 8 hours | 100% |
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| Lim et al. (2004) [ | 1 | Diphenhydramine 50 mg po QID and 30 mg iv QD, metoclopramide 9 mg iv QD | Continuous fixed rate | 24 hours | 100% |
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| Gammon et al. (2004) [ | 1 | Dexamethasone iv, hydrocortisone 100 mg iv, diphenhydramine iv | From 1 : 10000 to 1 : 1 in 5 steps | 8 hours | 100% |
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| Schüll et al. (2001) [ | 1 | Dexamethasone iv (high dose), antihistamine iv, ondasetron 8 mg iv | Continuous fixed rate | 48 hours | 100% |
BID: twice a day, iv: intravenously, po: by mouth, QD: once a day, QID: four times a day.