| Literature DB >> 33150548 |
Emanuel Raschi1, Michele Fusaroli2, Andrea Ardizzoni3, Elisabetta Poluzzi2, Fabrizio De Ponti2.
Abstract
PURPOSE: We assessed pulmonary toxicity of cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK)4/6 inhibitors by analyzing the publicly available FDA Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS).Entities:
Keywords: Abemaciclib; Cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) 4/6 inhibitors; FAERS; Interstitial lung disease; Pharmacovigilance; Signal
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33150548 PMCID: PMC7641870 DOI: 10.1007/s10549-020-06001-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Breast Cancer Res Treat ISSN: 0167-6806 Impact factor: 4.872
Demographic data of interstitial lung disease (ILD). Data are expressed as counts, with relevant percentage in parentheses. In square brackets, corresponding percentage of non-ILD events is presented.
| Abemaciclib | Palbociclib | Ribociclib | CDK4/6 inhibitors† | All other drugs | Other anticancer drugs | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adult | 11 (27) [52] | 20 (28) [46] | 2 (29) [55] | 33 (28) [47] | 7208 (36) [59] | 5479 (39) [63] |
| 18–29 | 0 (0) [1] | 0 (0) [1] | 0 (0) [2] | 0 (0) [1] | 324 (5) [14] | 211 (4) [11] |
| 30–50 | 4 (36) [27] | 0 (0) [26] | 1 (50) [37] | 5 (15) [27] | 1859 (26) [38] | 1373 (25) [38] |
| 51–64 | 7 (64) [72] | 20 (100) [73] | 1 (50) [60] | 28 (85) [72] | 5025 (70) [48] | 3895 (71) [51] |
| Elderly | 30 (73) [48] | 52 (72) [54] | 5 (71) [44] | 84 (72) [53] | 12,523 (62) [35] | 8409 (59) [32] |
| 65–75 | 16 (53) [65] | 36 (69) [64] | 2 (40) [67] | 52 (62) [64] | 7463 (60) [59] | 5494 (65) [66] |
| 76–85 | 11 (37) [27] | 14 (27) [30] | 3 (60) [29] | 27 (32) [30] | 4291 (34) [32] | 2604 (31) [28] |
| >85 | 3 (10) [7] | 2 (4) [6] | 0 (0) [4] | 5 (6) [6] | 769 (6) [9] | 311 (4) [5] |
| Other/Missing | 19 | 21 | 7 | 44 | 5772 | 3912 |
| Physician | 21 (35) [13] | 53 (58) [17] | 9 (64) [35] | 80 (50) [19] | 12,326 (51) [25] | 9129 (54) [29] |
| Consumer | 31 (52) [44] | 22 (24) [36] | 4 (29) [29] | 55 (35) [36] | 3451 (14) [49] | 2427 (14) [42] |
| Pharmacist | 5 (8) [18] | 6 (7) [20] | 0 [6] | 10 (6) [19] | 1784 (7) [7] | 937 (6) [7] |
| Other/Missing | 3 | 12 | 1 | 16 | 7942 | 5307 |
| Asia/Japan | 49 (82) [6] | 39 (42) [5] | 2 (14) [8] | 84 (52) [5] | 9109 (53) [6] | 7020 (56) [8] |
| North America | 8 (13) [88] | 25 (27) [84] | 7 (50) [44] | 40 (25) [80] | 3552 (21) [75] | 2519 (20) [73] |
| Europe | 3 (5) [5] | 29 (31) [8] | 4 (29) [37] | 36 (22) [10] | 4317 (25) [16] | 2823 (23) [16] |
| Other/Missing | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 8525 | 5438 |
| Hospitalization | 39 (65) [20] | 42 (45) [16] | 8 (57) [29] | 87 (54) [18] | 13,618 (53) [25] | 9369 (53) [26] |
| Death | 18 (30) [7] | 24 (26) [11] | 5 (36) [14] | 46 (29) [11] | 7417 (29) [9] | 5797 (33) [10] |
| Life-threatening | 5 (8) [2] | 8 (9) [1] | 2 (14) [5] | 15 (9) [1] | 3992 (12) [3] | 2138 (12) [3] |
| Other | 27 (45) [20] | 68 (73) [32] | 7 (50) [51] | 99 (61) [33] | 14,239 (56) [35] | 10,253 (58) [37] |
| Missing | 6 (10) [57] | 6 (6) [50] | 0 (0) [22] | 10 (6) [47] | 139 (1) [40] | 86 (0) [38] |
| 50 (21–71; 35) | 85 (19–143; 41) | 253 (77–336; 6) | 63 (21–136; 82) | 71 (21–263; 11,443) | 57 (17–154; 8232) | |
| Amiodarone | / | 4 (4.2) | / | 4 (2.5) | 1235 (4.8) | 208 (1.2) |
| Gemcitabine | / | 2 (2.1) | / | 2 (1.2) | 672 (2.6) | 672 (3.8) |
| Cetuximab | / | / | 1 (7.1) | 1 (0.6) | 269 (1.1) | 269 (1.5) |
| Everolimus | / | 4 (4.2) | / | 4 (2.5) | 598 (2.3) | 598 (3.4) |
/ Not reported, IQR interquartile range
*Based on the systematic review by Skeoch et al. [6]: amiodarone, methotrexate, leflunomide, cyclophosphamide, bleomycin, gemcitabine, gefitinib, erlotinib, infliximab, etanercept, rituximab, panitumumab, cetuximab, sirolimus, temsirolimus, everolimus, nitrofurantoin, daptomycin
# Multiple outcomes can be reported for the same report
† The sum of the number of ILD cases for CDK4/6 inhibitors as a drug class is lower than the total number of ILD cases for individual CDK4/6 inhibitors because, in a few reports, more than one agent was recorded
Disproportionality approach: primary analyses
| Comparator | CDK4/6 inhibitors† | Abemaciclib | Palbociclib | Ribociclib | Bleomycin |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | [ | [ | [ | [ | |
| N, ROR (95%CI) | N, ROR (95%CI) | N, ROR (95%CI) | N, ROR (95%CI) | N, ROR (95%CI) | |
| All drugs | 161, 1.50 (1.28–1.74)* | 60, 8.66 (6.59–11.06)* | 93, 1.05 (0.85–1.27) | 14, 1.28 (0.74–2.04) | 199, 13.20 (11.38–15.16)* |
| Anticancer drugs | 161, 0.81 (0.69–0.94) | 60, 4.70 (3.62–5.98)* | 93, 0.57 (0.46–0.69) | 14, 0.69 (0.40–1.11) | 199, 7.19 (6.22–8.27)* |
*Statistically significant disproportionality, i.e., lower limit of the 95% confidence interval > 1 (see text for details). ROR: Reporting Odds Ratio; CI: confidence Interval
† The sum of the number of ILD cases for CDK4/6 inhibitors as a drug class is lower than the total number of ILD cases for individual CDK4/6 inhibitors because, in a few reports, more than one agent was recorded
Disproportionality approach: sensitivity analyses and relevant signal consistency
| Restricted to the 2015–2020 period | Restricted to non-Japan reports | Corrected for event-related competition bias | Corrected for drug-related competition bias # | Corrected for notoriety bias | Restricted to suspect reports | Signal consistency | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Drug | N, ROR (95%CI) | N, ROR (95%CI) | N, ROR (95%CI) | N, ROR (95%CI) | N, ROR (95%CI) | N, ROR (95%CI) | |
| CDK4/6 inhibitors† | 161, 1.59 (1.35–1.85) | 83, 1.61 (1.30–1.99) | 122, 1.43 (1.19–1.70) | 154, 1.98 (1.69–2.31) | 122, 1.46 (1.22–1.73) | 158, 1.49 (1.27–1.73) | |
| Abemaciclib | 60, 9.23 (7.10–11.83) | 11, 3.44 (1.82–5.81) | 45, 9.93 (7.25–13.12) | 60, 11.92 (9.15–15.25) | 42, 9.75 (7.04–13.02) | 58, 8.49 (6.48–10.88) | |
| Palbociclib | 93, 1.10 (0.90–1.34) | 59, 1.38 (1.07–1.77) | 68, 0.94 (0.74–1.18) | 87, 1.34 (1.07–1.64) | 72, 1.00 (0.79–1.26) | 92, 1.05 (0.84–1.27) | WEAK (2/6) |
| Ribociclib | 14, 1.37 (0.78–2.21) | 13, 2.39 (1.34–3.92) | 13, 1.56 (0.88–2.55) | 13, 1.70 (0.96–2.77) | 13, 1.76 (0.96–2.86) | 13, 1.20 (0.68–1.98) | WEAK (1/6) |
*Statistically significant disproportionality, i.e., lower limit of the 95% confidence interval > 1 (see text for details). ROR: Reporting Odds Ratio; CI: confidence Interval.
# Based on the systematic review by Skeoch et al. [6]: amiodarone, methotrexate, leflunomide, cyclophosphamide, bleomycin, gemcitabine, gefitinib, erlotinib, infliximab, etanercept, rituximab, panitumumab, cetuximab, sirolimus, temsirolimus, everolimus, nitrofurantoin, daptomycin
† The sum of the number of ILD cases for CDK4/6 inhibitors as a drug class is lower than the total number of ILD cases for individual CDK4/6 inhibitors because, in a few reports, more than one agent was recorded
Causality assessment of interstitial lung disease (ILD) with CDK4/6 inhibitors based on Bradford Hill criteria
| Criterium | Findings | Criterium fulfilled |
|---|---|---|
| Strength of the association | This is the first disproportionality analysis comparing reporting of ILD with CDK4/6 inhibitors in primary analysis (versus all other drugs and anticancer agents). Although ROR is not a measure of risk, the strength of the ROR suggests a strong signal (the impact of unmeasurable confounders is likely to be negligible) | √ |
| Consistency | Results of disproportionality approaches were consistent across various sensitivity analyses, especially for abemaciclib | √ |
| Coherence | Case reports have been recently published suggesting a potential association. Some imbalances emerged from clinical trials, although underpowered to actually identify and characterize rare adverse events | √ |
| Specificity | Although ILD encompasses a heterogeneous spectrum of lung toxicities, we applied the most specific definition to reduce the likelihood of false-positive results. Pharmacovigilance data suggest that a drug-specific effect (rather than a class-effect) cannot be excluded | ? |
| Biological gradient | Although the quality of reports is variable due to missing data, there are no clues of actual dose- or duration-response relationships. ILD was reported to occur at therapeutic dosage (i.e., a collateral effect rather than a toxic effect) | ? |
| Temporal relationship | Notwithstanding variable quality of reports due to missing data, ILD does appear to occur early after drug administration, thus suggesting the need for patients’ monitoring, especially in the presence of risk factors (smoking, previous lung disease, Japanese subjects). This latency is in line with data from anticancer drugs (e.g., EGFR inhibitors and bleomycin). Moreover, positive dechallenge in the majority of cases supports reversibility | √ |
| Biological plausibility and experimental support | A recent pre-clinical study in a mice model of bleomycin-induced lung fibrosis found that palbociclib augmented inflammatory cell recruitment (including macrophages and T cells) in the bronchoalveolar lavage fluid. This may represent a plausible mechanistic basis that may increase patients’ susceptibility to ILD occurrence | √ |
| Analogy | The association of ILD with several anticancer drugs (e.g., EGFR inhibitors, bleomycin, checkpoint inhibitors) and bleomycin (used as positive control) is comparable in terms of ROR | √ |
ROR reporting odds ratio (a measure of disproportionality), EGFR epidermal growth factor receptor
√ Relevant criterium is fulfilled based on pharmacovigilance data
? Uncertainty in fulfillment of relevant criterium