Literature DB >> 31546999

Radioimmunotherapy in Non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma: Retrospective Adverse Event Profiling of Zevalin and Bexxar.

Christos Sachpekidis1, David B Jackson2, Theodoros G Soldatos3.   

Abstract

The development of monoclonal antibodies has dramatically changed the outcome of patients with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL), the most common hematological malignancy. However, despite the satisfying results of monoclonal antibody treatment, only few NHL patients are permanently cured with single-agent therapies. In this context, radioimmunotherapy, the administration of radionuclides conjugated to monoclonal antibodies, is aimed to augment the single-agent efficacy of immunotherapy in order to deliver targeted radiation to tumors, particularly CD20+ B-cell lymphomas. Based on evidence from several trials in NHL, the radiolabeled antibodies 90Y-ibritumomab tiuxetan (Zevalin, Spectrum Pharmaceuticals) and 131I-tositumomab (Bexxar, GlaxoSmithKline) received FDA approval in 2002 and 2003, respectively. However, none of the two radioimmunotherapeutic agents has been broadly applied in clinical practice. The main reason for the under-utilization of radioimmunotherapy includes economic and logistic considerations. However, concerns about potential side effects have also been raised. Driven by these developments, we performed retrospective analysis of adverse events reporting Zevalin or Bexxar, extracted from the FDA's Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS) and the World Health Organization's VigiBase repository. Our results indicate that the two radioimmunotherapeutic agents have both related and distinct side effect profiles and confirm their known toxicological considerations. Our work also suggests that computational analysis of real-world post-marketing data can provide informative clinical insights. While more prospective studies are necessary to fully characterize the efficacy and safety of radioimmunotherapy, we expect that it has not yet reached its full therapeutic potential in modern hematological oncology.

Entities:  

Keywords:  90Y-ibritumomab tiuxetan (Zevalin), 131I-tositumomab (Bexxar), FDA’s Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS), VigiBase; non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma; radioimmunotherapy

Year:  2019        PMID: 31546999      PMCID: PMC6958320          DOI: 10.3390/ph12040141

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pharmaceuticals (Basel)        ISSN: 1424-8247


1. Introduction

The development and introduction of monoclonal antibodies in clinical practice have constituted a true revolution in the management of non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma (NHL), the most frequent hematologic malignancy. CD20, a transmembrane calcium channel protein, represents the most common target antigen for monoclonal antibody therapy, since it is expressed at high density on most B-cell lymphomas [1]. Rituximab was the first monoclonal antibody approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in 1997, for the treatment of relapsed or refractory, low-grade (indolent) or follicular, CD20+ NHL. Rituximab is directed against the CD20 antigen and exerts its antitumor effect by activation of antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity through complement activation and induction of apoptosis [2]. However, despite the satisfying results of monoclonal antibody treatment, only few patients are permanently cured with single-agent therapy: fewer than half of follicular NHL patients respond to Rituximab with median response duration of about a year, since they may not respond or may develop resistance to antibody therapy [3,4]. Radioimmunotherapy represents an attempt to augment the single-agent efficacy of this therapeutic approach in NHL by conjugating therapeutic radionuclides to the monoclonal antibodies in order to deliver radiation to these tumors [5], which are known to be more radiosensitive than solid tumors and other types of cancer [6,7,8,9]. The mechanism of action of radioimmunotherapy on tumor cells involves a combination of the antibody-stimulated cytolysis and induction of apoptosis, with the ionizing radiation emitted from the radioisotope, which generates free radicals leading to cellular damage. Moreover, due to the “crossfire” radiation effect, adjacent tumor cells that do not bind the antibody may still be killed [5]. The radiolabeled antibodies 90Y-ibritumomab tiuxetan (Zevalin; Spectrum Pharmaceuticals) and 131I-tositumomab (Bexxar; GlaxoSmithKline) received FDA approval in 2002 and 2003, respectively, based on impressive results from several trials [10,11,12,13]. Zevalin was initially approved for treatment of patients with relapsed or refractory low-grade, follicular B-cell NHL, including patients with Rituximab-refractory follicular NHL. In 2014, it received expanded approval to include the first-line consolidation therapy of NHL patients following initial treatment with front-line chemotherapy; this approval was based on the results of a randomized multicenter phase III trial involving 414 patients with newly diagnosed advanced follicular lymphoma [14]. Bexxar was also approved for the treatment of relapsed, refractory, and transformed indolent lymphomas. Despite the proven efficacy of radioimmunotherapy, not only in the relapsed/refractory setting but also in newly diagnosed patients with high response rates and durable remissions [14,15,16,17,18], this treatment modality has failed to be widely adopted by the hematooncology community. As a result, this led to commercial failure of the two products, reaching its nadir in 2014 with the discontinuation of U.S. production of Bexxar due to decreasing sales of the agent [4,19]. Although economic and logistic considerations have played a key role in the underuse of radioimmunotherapy, concerns about potential side effects related to radiation exposure, particularly the development of myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) and acute myeloid leukemia (AML), have also been raised [4]. Driven by these developments, we sought to characterize the safety profile of this treatment modality based on accessible sources of real-world data. For this reason, adverse events (AEs) of patients receiving Zevalin or Bexxar reported in the FDA’s Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS) and in the World Health Organization’s (WHO) global Individual Case Safety Report (ICSR) database (VigiBase) were extracted and analyzed.

2. Materials and Methods

We profiled Bexxar and Zevalin AEs by extracting data from the FAERS (incl. 2017Q2) and VigiBase (incl. 2018Q2) repositories.

2.1. Data Integration

The public FAERS dataset contained 7.9 million cases and held records regarding the patients’ treatments (medications), the indications of those treatments (disease or condition), and the observed reactions and outcomes (e.g., “death” or “hospitalization”) reported in these AEs. To compensate for ambiguities introduced by the non-standardized use of drug names [20], FAERS free-text medication descriptions were consolidated via a stepwise process that matched each name to standardized dictionaries [21]. Indications and reactions, coded by FAERS in terms from the Medical Dictionary for Regulatory Activities (MedDRA), were analyzed at the Preferred Term (PT) level (i.e., MedDRA Level 4 descriptions). Similarly, we processed the VigiBase dataset that held 17095324 AE cases.

2.2. Statistical Analysis

From each dataset (FAERS, VigiBase), we extracted two separate AE cohorts for Bexxar and Zevalin, respectively defined as follows: FAERS Bexxar cohort: 290 AEs (FAERS cases annotated with the ‘Tositumomab’ drug record). FAERS Zevalin cohort: 1196 AEs (FAERS cases annotated with the ‘Ibritumomab’ drug record). VigiBase Bexxar cohort: 307 AEs (VigiBase cases with product (drug) names mentioning ‘Bexxar’ or ‘Tositumomab’). VigiBase Zevalin cohort: 1125 AEs (VigiBase cases with product (drug) names mentioning ‘Zevalin’ or ‘Ibritumomab’). For the statistical characterization of the cohorts, we employed the proportional reporting ratio (PRR) metric, an established measure of disproportionality in pharmacovigilance for the evaluation of signals generated from spontaneous reporting data [22]. PRRs were computed using the approach described by van Puijenbroek et al. [23]. Each cohort was characterized with respect to the occurrence of drugs, outcomes, indications and reactions reported in the respective AEs. We also considered relevant statistical significance reflected by Fisher’s exact test p-values (two-tailed). In this study, we considered statistical significance indicated by a p-value of 5% or lower (i.e., when p-value < 0.05). To structure the statistical analysis, each cohort’s AEs were compared against the remaining respective dataset’s AEs (whether FAERS or VigiBase) during the calculation of PRR and Fisher’s exact test scores. Results for each cohort are summarized in the Supplementary Material file: results per cohort list the observed case counts (i.e., number of AEs that a certain occurrence was observed in each cohort), percentage of occurrence within each cohort’s cases, and the respective PRR disproportionality scores and Fisher’s test p-values. The Supplementary Material file contains all observations for consideration by the community, irrespective of their PRR or Fisher’s exact test signals.

3. Results

Our dataset consisted of AEs extracted from FAERS and VigiBase that reported use of Bexxar or Zevalin. As expected, ‘non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma’, as well as other PTs describing—more or less specific—forms of lymphoma were reported as treatment indication in the vast majority of the reported cases in all cohorts (see Supplementary Material file). With the exception of three patient cases, where both drugs have been co-reported—most likely in succession one after the other—Zevalin and Bexxar were not reported in the same AEs. The most frequent medication reported with Zevalin was Rituximab, mentioned in 70% of its FAERS AEs. In comparison, Rituximab was mentioned only in 15% of Bexxar’s AEs in FAERS. The identified AE trends were likely reflective of clinical usage trends (Figure 1), including the decreasing course of their use during the last years. Despite the certain collection lag existing in the capture of respective AEs, the historical timeline portrays both the initial increase that followed the agents’ FDA approvals as well as their decline, particularly for Bexxar. Zevalin’s temporary increase after 2014 probably represents its indication expansion to include the first-line consolidation therapy of NHL patients following initial treatment with front-line chemotherapy.
Figure 1

Timeline of AEs reporting Zevalin and Bexxar in the FDA’s Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS). Overall, there are more AEs identified for Zevalin in FAERS, likely indicating broader usage adoption than for Bexxar. Fourteen cases reporting Bexxar prior to 2001 are not displayed. Also, the distribution of AEs over time does not include incompletely reported cases for which no date was specifically registered. Last, AEs dated prior to a drug’s approval may reflect reports from preapproval studies and clinical trials. The reduction of AE numbers for 2017 is explained by the fact that the full dataset for that year was not yet released by FAERS at the time this analysis took place. Note that a certain time delay between the disclosure of reports to FAERS and the date of an event or the use of an agent is reasonable to be expected.

Overall, FAERS and VigiBase contained similar adverse reaction profiles for each radioimmunotherapeutic agent. Table 1 juxtaposes key patient outcomes reported in the respective radioimmunotherapeutic agent cohorts.
Table 1

Selected outcomes reported in the two datasets; all adverse event (AE) cases considered per cohort. Note that the outcomes associated to a single event may be more than one.

Outcome% Zevalin AEs% Bexxar AEs
FAERSVigiBaseFAERSVigiBase
Death33.422.822.124.1
Hospitalization41.522.131.020.5
Life threatening7.43.97.95.2
Other46.331.836.623.1

3.1. Adverse Event Profiling

Next, side effect profiles for those cohorts were extracted: Table 2, Table 3, Table 4 and Table 5 summarize up to the thirty most frequently reported reactions in each cohort, described in MedDRA PTs (i.e., level 4 terms). The following PTs did not reflect drug-induced effects and were therefore excluded from these tables, whenever mentioned: ‘Disease progression’, ‘Malignant neoplasm progression’, ‘Drug ineffective’, ‘Stem cell transplant’, ‘Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma’, ‘Death’.
Table 2

Most frequently reported MedDRA preferred term (PT) reactions (level 4 terms) with Zevalin in FAERS. All observations are statistically significant, with p-value < 0.05.

Reaction (MedDRA PT) NameNumber of AEs_in CohortPRRCohort %
Thrombocytopenia 115121.412.6
Neutropenia12419.010.4
Sepsis9813.08.2
White blood cell count decreased 28413.27.0
Myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS)8374.16.9
Platelet count decreased 18012.06.7
Pyrexia793.46.6
Pancytopenia7820.06.5
Febrile neutropenia7620.96.4
Anaemia 3654.75.4
Bone marrow failure6337.35.3
Diarrhoea601.75.0
Pneumonia572.94.8
Haemoglobin decreased 3516.64.3
Meningitis tuberculous491489.14.1
Multi-organ failure4415.93.7
Acute myeloid leukaemia (AML)4342.53.6
Leukopenia 24313.63.6
Neutrophil count decreased4219.43.5
Progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy3864.53.2
Nausea360.73.0
Cytomegalovirus infection3337.42.8
Septic shock3312.72.8
Mucosal inflammation3219.72.7
Infection324.02.7
Renal failure313.52.6

1 The terms ‘Thrombocytopenia’ and ‘Platelet count decreased’ refer to the same condition. 2 The terms ‘White blood count decreased’ and ‘Leukopenia’ refer to the same condition. 3 The terms ‘Anaemia’ and ‘Haemoglobin decreased’ refer to the same condition.

Table 3

Most frequently reported MedDRA PT reactions (level 4 terms) with Zevalin in VigiBase. All observations are statistically significant, with p-value < 0.05.

Reaction (MedDRA PT) NameNumber of AEs_in CohortPRRCohort %
Thrombocytopenia 116520.114.7
Neutropenia15724.214.0
Platelet count decreased 111735.210.4
Pancytopenia9037.28.0
Sepsis7120.06.3
White blood cell count decreased 27118.46.3
Myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS)69170.16.1
Anaemia 3596.15.2
Pneumonia535.24.7
Pyrexia511.44.5
Febrile neutropenia5026.24.4
Leukopenia 2489.14.3
Neutrophil count decreased4224.13.7
Meningitis tuberculous373877.33.3
Nausea370.63.3
Fatigue341.23.0
Diarrhoea341.03.0
Acute myeloid leukaemia (AML)3393.72.9
Bone marrow failure3215.12.8
Pain291.22.6
Progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy27131.52.4
Haemoglobin decreased 3257.02.2
Dyspnoea240.72.1
Dehydration234.62.0
Vomiting230.62.0
Asthenia231.22.0

1 The terms ‘Thrombocytopenia’ and ‘Platelet count decreased’ refer to the same condition. 2 The terms ‘White blood count decreased’ and ‘Leukopenia’ refer to the same condition. 3 The terms ‘Anaemia’ and ‘Haemoglobin decreased’ refer to the same condition.

Table 4

Most frequently reported MedDRA PT reactions (level 4 terms) with Bexxar in FAERS. All observations are statistically significant, with p-value < 0.05.

Reaction (MedDRA PT) NameNumber of AEs_in CohortPRRCohort %
Myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS)46168.715.9
Pyrexia305.310.3
Acute myeloid leukaemia (AML)2289.47.6
Fatigue222.07.6
Dyspnoea212.47.2
Nausea181.46.2
Anaemia175.15.9
Thrombocytopenia +169.35.5
Pancytopenia1414.84.8
Hypotension144.44.8
Febrile neutropenia1314.74.5
Neutropenia138.24.5
Chills136.74.5
Lymphadenopathy1220.44.1
Pneumonia122.64.1
Vomiting121.64.1
Dizziness121.54.1
Infusion related reaction1114.93.8
Rash111.93.8
Platelet count decreased +106.23.4
Back pain102.73.4
Arthralgia101.83.4
Asthenia101.73.4
Pleural effusion98.13.1
Cardiac failure congestive94.23.1
Decreased appetite92.53.1
Weight decreased92.13.1

+ The terms ‘Thrombocytopenia’ and ‘Platelet count decreased’ refer to the same condition.

Table 5

Most frequently reported MedDRA PT reactions (level 4 terms) with Bexxar in VigiBase. All observations are statistically significant, with p-value < 0.05.

Reaction (MedDRA PT) NameNumber of AEs_in CohortPRRCohort %
Myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS)43386.914.0
Acute myeloid leukaemia (AML)27280.58.8
Pyrexia272.78.8
Fatigue222.87.2
Dyspnoea202.36.5
Thrombocytopenia +188.05.9
Nausea171.05.5
Febrile neutropenia1528.74.9
Pancytopenia1522.74.9
Anaemia155.74.9
Neutropenia137.34.2
Pneumonia134.74.2
Hypotension134.04.2
Chills133.74.2
Lymphadenopathy1216.63.9
Infusion related reaction1124.83.6
Infection118.33.6
Back pain114.13.6
Rash110.83.6
Platelet count decreased +1011.03.3
Pain in extremity102.83.3
Arthralgia102.23.3
Asthenia101.93.3
Vomiting100.93.3
White blood cell count decreased98.62.9
Cardiac failure congestive97.92.9
Weight decreased93.72.9

+ The terms ‘Thrombocytopenia’ and ‘Platelet count decreased’ refer to the same condition.

3.1.1. Zevalin Reactions

In both datasets (FAERS, VigiBase), cytopenias were the most commonly reported reactions with Zevalin (Table 2 and Table 3). More specifically, ‘thrombocytopenia’, and ‘neutropenia’ were the most frequent reaction PTs, followed by ‘leukopenia’ and ‘pancytopenia’. Among the most frequently reported reaction PTs there were only few infusion related terms (such as urticaria, hypotension, angioedema, hypoxia, bronchospasm, or cardiogenic shock), with the exception of ‘dyspnea’ that was reported in 2.1% of the VigiBase Zevalin cohort. Reaction PT ‘pyrexia’ had a somewhat increased PRR (3.4 in FAERS, 1.4 in VigiBase) and even though it might represent an infusion related reaction, it could also occur in the context of an infection or inflammation. ‘Sepsis’, ‘febrile neutropenia’ and a variety of infections and inflammations (including ‘mucosal inflammation’) were also often reported with the agent and had increased PRR scores. Interestingly, reaction PT ‘Meningitis tuberculous’ had a very high PRR signal in both Zevalin datasets. Among the reaction PTs with high PRR signals were also ‘Myelodysplastic syndrome’ (MDS) and ‘acute myeloid leukemia’ (AML). MDS was reported in 6.9% and 6.1% of the corresponding FAERS and VigiBase cohorts, while AML was reported in 3.6% and 2.9% of the respective FAERS and VigiBase Zevalin cohorts.

3.1.2. Bexxar Reactions

Bexxar cohorts were smaller in size as compared to the Zevalin ones. The most frequently reported PTs with Bexxar were MDS (15.9% in FAERS, 14.0% in VigiBase), ‘pyrexia’ (10.3% in FAERS, 8.8% in VigiBase), AML (7.6% in FAERS, 8.8% in VigiBase), ‘fatigue’ (7.6% in FAERS, 7.2% in VigiBase) and ‘dyspnea’ (7.2% in FAERS, 6.5% in VigiBase). As in the case of Zevalin, cytopenias were also frequently reported with Bexxar in both datasets. In contrast, allergic/infusion reaction PTs such as ‘dyspnea’, ‘hypotension’, ‘chills’ and ‘vomiting’ were recorded in a higher proportion of the respective cohorts for Bexxar (Table 4 and Table 5).

4. Discussion

Despite the promising results from clinical trials providing evidence regarding the efficacy and safety of radioimmunotherapy, neither of the two approved radioimmunotherapeutic agents found broad application in clinical practice. Bexxar exited the US market in 2014 after low sales, whereas nowadays Zevalin is not often used in the treatment of NHL. Although economic and logistic considerations played an important role in the underutilization of these agents [24], one other key concern regarding radioimmunotherapy is its toxicity profile and, more specifically, bone marrow damage and unexpected late side effects—particularly, the development of MDS and AML [3,25]. In this work, we examined such considerations by analyzing real world post-marketing AE data extracted from FAERS and VigiBase. Our results provide additional insights into the safety profile of radioimmunotherapy. Table 6 summarizes the most frequently reported reactions for Zevalin and Bexxar in both datasets by organizing them in groups of main classes.
Table 6

Most frequently reported MedDRA PT reactions (level 4 terms) with Zevalin and Bexxar in both datasets categorized in groups.

ZevalinBexxar
Blood/Cytopenias
ThrombocytopeniaNeutropeniaLeukopeniaPancytopeniaAnemiaBone marrow failureAnemiaThrombocytopeniaPancytopeniaNeutropenia
Infections/Inflammations
SepsisPyrexia +Febrile neutropeniaPneumoniaMeningitis tuberculousCytomegalovirus infectionSeptic schockMucosal inflammationPyrexia +Febrile neutropeniaChillsPneumonia
Secondary malignancies
Myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS)Myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS)
Acute myeloid leukaemia (AML)Acute myeloid leukaemia (AML)
Gastrointestinal
DiarrhoeaNauseaNausea
Other
Multi-organ failureProgressive multifocal leukoencephalopathyRenal failureFatiguePainAstheniaDehydrationFatigueDyspnoeaHypotensionChillsLymphadenopathyDizzinessInfusion related reactionRashBack painArthralgiaAstheniaPleural effusionCardiac failure congestiveDecreased appetiteWeight decreased

+ The term ‘pyrexia’ could be an infusion reaction but also an infection sign.

The analysis of the Zevalin AE cohorts confirmed its known toxicological profile [26,27,28]. The high occurrence of cytopenias may be attributed to bone marrow suppression induced by the agent, while infections, inflammations and related side effects were also often reported, with sepsis, pyrexia and febrile neutropenia being the most frequent ones. Despite its consideration as one of the most common Zevalin AEs, ‘nasopharyngitis’ was only occasionally reported as such (mentioned only in two AE cases of the FAERS Zevalin cohort, as reaction) [26]. Interestingly, ‘nausea’, ‘dyspnea’ and ‘vomiting’ had lower PRR scores (<1), despite their reported frequency in the FAERS and/or VigiBase Zevalin cohorts (>2%). In contrast, the data suggest ‘tuberculous meningitis’ as a rather specific reaction PT related to the Zevalin cohorts, containing a significant 17.5% and 14.8% of the term’s total mentioning in FAERS and VigiBase, respectively. However, we could not confirm this observation in the literature, nor assess further whether this occurrence could be attributed to some sort of reporting bias or co-medication effects. Without access to detailed clinical data or the original AE narratives, we observed that almost all of Zevalin’s FAERS tuberculous meningitis AEs were in patients being pre- or co-medicated with chemotherapeutic agents such as Vincristine, Doxorubicin and Etoposide, as well as Prednisone. Secondary malignancies, namely MDS and AML, were also reported with Zevalin. More specifically, MDS was reported with Zevalin in FAERS with an occurrence of 6.9% and AML with 3.6%, and respectively in 6.1% and 2.9% of the VigiBase Zevalin cohort. This is in agreement with the cumulative incidence of MDL/AML in 5.2% of patients with relapsed or refractory NHL enrolled in Zevalin clinical studies [26]. However, the majority of Zevalin patients first receive Rituximab treatment and it is therefore difficult to determine which of these agents has primarily contributed to the occurrence of MDS and AML in the examined AEs, especially when Rituximab itself is also considered as a potential risk factor for the development of these secondary malignancies [29,30,31,32]. One other observation that supports this concern is the reporting of ‘progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy’ and ‘cytomegalovirus infection’, which are identified risks of Rituximab therapy [29]. Finally, ‘mucosal inflammation’—a significant consideration in terms of Zevalin treatment—was reported in 2.7% of the FAERS Zevalin cohort, whereas only few serious infusion related reactions, which are considered potentially severe during therapy with Zevalin and sometimes even fatal [26], were reported. The analysis of the smaller Bexxar cohorts revealed a somewhat different toxicological profile, in comparison to Zevalin. This is in part expected, given that ibritumomab tiuxetan is radiolabeled with 90Y while tositumomab is radiolabeled with 131I—even though both radionuclides are beta emitters, they possess different characteristics regarding physical half-life, maximum beta energy, penetration length of their beta emissions, as well as emission of gamma radiation. Such physical differences of the radionuclides directly influence both the biodistribution and the dosimetry of the radioimmunoconjugate applied, which in turn affect their toxicity. To determine radiation exposure to various organs and to confirm tumor targeting, dosimetry is incorporated into the design of radioimmunotherapy regimens [33]. However, dosimetry is not required with Zevalin, since the first dosimetry analyses of the agent in several clinical trials with relapsed or refractory NHL showed that radiation absorbed doses were within safety limits and did not correlate with toxicity [34,35]. While the administered activity of Zevalin is mainly determined by patient weight and baseline platelet count, dosimetry before radioimmunotherapy with the 131I-labeled Bexxar is mandatory to determine the appropriate delivered activity [36]. The first difference between the two agents related to the occurrence of secondary malignancies that were reported in a higher proportion among Bexxar’s cohorts: MDS was reported in 15.9% and AML in 7.6% of the respective FAERS cohort and, accordingly, in 14.0% and 8.8% of the VigiBase cohort. These findings are in line with the cumulative incidence of MDS/secondary leukemia observed in 10% of patients enrolled in Bexxar clinical trials with a median follow-up of 39 months [37]. Infusion/allergic reactions were also reported in higher proportions among Bexxar AEs as compared to Zevalin, with ‘dyspnea’, ‘hypotension’, ‘chills’, ‘vomiting’ and ‘rash’ being mentioned in more than 3% of each cohort’s cases. However, ‘nausea’, ‘rash’ and ‘vomiting’ had lower PRR scores (≤1) in Bexxar’s VigiBase cohort. Moreover, pyrexia, which could be either an infusion reaction or an infection sign, was in both Bexxar datasets second only to MDS and AML. Interestingly, cytopenias were reported in smaller proportions of the Bexxar cohorts, when compared to Zevalin. Similarly, this was the case also for infections, inflammations and their related reactions, with pyrexia, febrile neutropenia and pneumonia being the most frequently reported. Hypothyroidism, a main concern regarding Bexxar usage due to Iodine 131I, was only occasionally reported (mentioned only in one AE case of the VigiBase Bexxar cohort, as reaction). One possible reason for this might be the effective use by the community of thyroid-blocking medication prior to the administration of this radioimmunotherapeutic regimen. Overall, results from the analysis of Zevalin AEs confirmed its known toxicological profile, consistent with findings from clinical trials as well as descriptions presented in the agent’s label. However, among Bexxar AEs secondary malignancies ranked first, before other commonly expected side effects such as cytopenias, infections, infusion reactions, asthenia or nausea, observed in > 25% of treated patients in some clinical trials [37]. This may be explained by the fact that FAERS and VigiBase contain reports of AEs and not all potential side effects, as documented in clinical trials and prospective studies. Bexxar cohorts were also smaller in size compared to Zevalin, therefore possibly not equivalently representative. One other aspect to consider is the potential bias that may underlie radioimmunotherapy AE reporting. Such a bias may be manifested in several ways, such as the use of terms coming from a particular terminology (medical/technical language), reporting of AEs occurring/examined in specific circumstances, prejudice of reporters (e.g., affected by media or peer commentaries), as well as failure to mention some reactions simply because they are known or not severe. Reporting bias may, for example, explain over- or under-representation of certain effects, such as in the cases of nasopharyngitis, or the reporting of infusion reactions among Zevalin AEs. Furthermore, causal etiologies underlying the observed events could not be clearly determined as both Zevalin and Bexxar were frequently mentioned with agents known to potentially increase the risk or severity of adverse effects when combined together (such as Rituximab, Cyclophosphamide, Prednisone, Vincristine, Doxorubicin, Fludarabine and Etoposide). Due to practical limitations, the present study could not consider specific severity grading of reported reactions, information regarding treatment duration or previous therapies, de-/re-challenge information, patient/event history and demographics, as well as data regarding dosage of the applied radioactive pharmaceuticals. Moreover, reported frequencies do not represent occurrence in the general treated population, but in patients who manifested AEs under therapy and their incidence was reported. As with other studies of AEs e.g., [38,39], our results should therefore not be interpreted as calculated incidences of side effects in the general NHL patient population receiving these radioimmunotherapeutic agents. This is not the intended use of data coming from spontaneous AE repositories since they contain only AEs and are therefore biased without proper normalization considering reference/control data. Nonetheless, AE analytics provide certain advantages and systematic insights in the toxicological profiling of therapeutic agents. Not only do they serve as an augmented data stream capturing real-world scenarios regarding therapeutic uses and conditions not studied in clinical-trials, but they also include information for many more patients [21,40]. When available, AE analytics can further benefit from the examination of additional data regarding laboratory and clinical parameters. For example, molecular dissection of AEs has been shown to effectively improve clinical insights, as well as inform about potential drug-drug interactions or other mechanisms underlying observed outcome phenotypes e.g., [41,42]. Such information could be important within the broader context of immunotherapy, potentially providing useful markers for the use of these agents in NHL patients. Indeed, results from recent NHL trial studies provide updated evidence regarding the efficacy and safety of radioimmunotherapy, possibly inspiring reconsideration of Zevalin and Bexxar’s clinical utility in modern hematological oncology [43,44,45].

5. Conclusions

We investigated the toxicological profile of radioimmunotherapeutic agents on NHL, by performing a retrospective analysis of AE cases of patients receiving Zevalin or Bexxar, reported in FDA’s FAERS and WHO’s VigiBase repositories. Overall, our results recapitulate known side effects observed with radioimmunotherapy and confirm cytopenias, infections, inflammations, infusion reactions, as well as MDS and AML as some of the main patient safety concerns. The present work also suggests that computational analysis of real-world patient outcome data can provide informative insights in the field of the toxicological profiling of therapeutic agents. While such analytics can certainly benefit from the consideration of additional clinical information, we also call for more studies required to characterize the efficacy and safety of radioimmunotherapy in NHL.
  36 in total

1.  Radioimmunotherapy in non-Hodgkin lymphoma: opinions of U.S. medical oncologists and hematologists.

Authors:  Niklaus G Schaefer; Jiemin Ma; Peng Huang; Judy Buchanan; Richard L Wahl
Journal:  J Nucl Med       Date:  2010-05-19       Impact factor: 10.057

2.  Modern radiation therapy for nodal non-Hodgkin lymphoma-target definition and dose guidelines from the International Lymphoma Radiation Oncology Group.

Authors:  Tim Illidge; Lena Specht; Joachim Yahalom; Berthe Aleman; Anne Kiil Berthelsen; Louis Constine; Bouthaina Dabaja; Kavita Dharmarajan; Andrea Ng; Umberto Ricardi; Andrew Wirth
Journal:  Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys       Date:  2014-05-01       Impact factor: 7.038

Review 3.  Radioimmunotherapy and Autologous Stem-Cell Transplantation in the Treatment of B-Cell Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma.

Authors:  Avichai Shimoni; Shifra Tzila Zwas
Journal:  Semin Nucl Med       Date:  2016-03       Impact factor: 4.446

4.  Radiation dosimetry results and safety correlations from 90Y-ibritumomab tiuxetan radioimmunotherapy for relapsed or refractory non-Hodgkin's lymphoma: combined data from 4 clinical trials.

Authors:  Gregory A Wiseman; Ellen Kornmehl; Bryan Leigh; William D Erwin; Donald A Podoloff; Stewart Spies; Richard B Sparks; Michael G Stabin; Thomas Witzig; Christine A White
Journal:  J Nucl Med       Date:  2003-03       Impact factor: 10.057

5.  Ibritumomab tiuxetan radioimmunotherapy for patients with relapsed or refractory non-Hodgkin lymphoma and mild thrombocytopenia: a phase II multicenter trial.

Authors:  Gregory A Wiseman; Leo I Gordon; Pratik S Multani; Thomas E Witzig; Stewart Spies; Nancy L Bartlett; Russell J Schilder; James L Murray; Mansoor Saleh; Roberta S Allen; Antonio J Grillo-López; Christine A White
Journal:  Blood       Date:  2002-06-15       Impact factor: 22.113

6.  131I-tositumomab therapy as initial treatment for follicular lymphoma.

Authors:  Mark S Kaminski; Melissa Tuck; Judith Estes; Arne Kolstad; Charles W Ross; Kenneth Zasadny; Denise Regan; Paul Kison; Susan Fisher; Stewart Kroll; Richard L Wahl
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2005-02-03       Impact factor: 91.245

7.  Treatment with ibritumomab tiuxetan radioimmunotherapy in patients with rituximab-refractory follicular non-Hodgkin's lymphoma.

Authors:  Thomas E Witzig; Ian W Flinn; Leo I Gordon; Christos Emmanouilides; Myron S Czuczman; Mansoor N Saleh; Larry Cripe; Gregory Wiseman; Teresa Olejnik; Pratik S Multani; Christine A White
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2002-08-01       Impact factor: 44.544

8.  Association Between Serotonin Syndrome and Second-Generation Antipsychotics via Pharmacological Target-Adverse Event Analysis.

Authors:  Rebecca Racz; Theodoros G Soldatos; David Jackson; Keith Burkhart
Journal:  Clin Transl Sci       Date:  2018-03-25       Impact factor: 4.689

9.  Retrospective Toxicological Profiling of Radium-223 Dichloride for the Treatment of Bone Metastases in Prostate Cancer Using Adverse Event Data.

Authors:  Theodoros G Soldatos; Ioannis Iakovou; Christos Sachpekidis
Journal:  Medicina (Kaunas)       Date:  2019-05-16       Impact factor: 2.430

10.  Examining Socioeconomic and Computational Aspects of Vaccine Pharmacovigilance.

Authors:  Vasiliki Soldatou; Anastasios Soldatos; Theodoros Soldatos
Journal:  Biomed Res Int       Date:  2019-02-19       Impact factor: 3.411

View more
  8 in total

Review 1.  The Chemical Scaffold of Theranostic Radiopharmaceuticals: Radionuclide, Bifunctional Chelator, and Pharmacokinetics Modifying Linker.

Authors:  Holis Abdul Holik; Faisal Maulana Ibrahim; Angela Alysia Elaine; Bernap Dwi Putra; Arifudin Achmad; Achmad Hussein Sundawa Kartamihardja
Journal:  Molecules       Date:  2022-05-10       Impact factor: 4.927

Review 2.  Perspectives on metals-based radioimmunotherapy (RIT): moving forward.

Authors:  Jordan M White; Freddy E Escorcia; Nerissa T Viola
Journal:  Theranostics       Date:  2021-04-15       Impact factor: 11.556

3.  Public Adverse Event Data Insights into the Safety of Pembrolizumab in Melanoma Patients.

Authors:  Anne Schaefer; Christos Sachpekidis; Francesca Diella; Anja Doerks; Anne-Sophie Kratz; Christian Meisel; David B Jackson; Theodoros G Soldatos
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2020-04-19       Impact factor: 6.639

4.  Application of a patient-centered reverse translational systems-based approach to understand mechanisms of an adverse drug reaction of immune checkpoint inhibitors.

Authors:  Sarah Kim; Gezim Lahu; Majid Vakilynejad; Theodoros G Soldatos; David B Jackson; Lawrence J Lesko; Mirjam N Trame
Journal:  Clin Transl Sci       Date:  2022-03-05       Impact factor: 4.438

5.  A case study of a patient-centered reverse translational systems-based approach to understand adverse event profiles in drug development.

Authors:  Sarah Kim; Gezim Lahu; Majid Vakilynejad; Theodoros G Soldatos; David B Jackson; Lawrence J Lesko; Mirjam N Trame
Journal:  Clin Transl Sci       Date:  2022-01-11       Impact factor: 4.438

Review 6.  Advancing drug safety science by integrating molecular knowledge with post-marketing adverse event reports.

Authors:  Theodoros G Soldatos; Sarah Kim; Stephan Schmidt; Lawrence J Lesko; David B Jackson
Journal:  CPT Pharmacometrics Syst Pharmacol       Date:  2022-02-20

7.  Phase 1/2a study of 177Lu-lilotomab satetraxetan in relapsed/refractory indolent non-Hodgkin lymphoma.

Authors:  Arne Kolstad; Tim Illidge; Nils Bolstad; Signe Spetalen; Ulf Madsbu; Caroline Stokke; Johan Blakkisrud; Ayca Løndalen; Noelle O'Rourke; Matthew Beasley; Wojciech Jurczak; Unn-Merete Fagerli; Michal Kaščák; Mike Bayne; Aleš Obr; Jostein Dahle; Lisa Rojkjaer; Veronique Pascal; Harald Holte
Journal:  Blood Adv       Date:  2020-09-08

Review 8.  Comparison of Anticancer Drug Toxicities: Paradigm Shift in Adverse Effect Profile.

Authors:  Debasish Basak; Scott Arrighi; Yasenya Darwiche; Subrata Deb
Journal:  Life (Basel)       Date:  2021-12-29
  8 in total

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