| Literature DB >> 33907881 |
Jakob Nedomansky1, Werner Haslik1, Ursula Pluschnig2, Christoph Kornauth3, Christine Deutschmann4, Stefan Hacker1, Günther G Steger2, Rupert Bartsch2, Robert M Mader5.
Abstract
PURPOSE: As critical parameter after extravasation of cytotoxic vesicants, anthracyclines were determined in removed tissue from patients requiring surgical intervention due to tissue necrosis. We monitored their distribution within the affected lesion to establish a possible dose-toxicity relation.Entities:
Keywords: Anthracycline; Extravasation; HPLC; Surgery; Tissue concentration
Year: 2021 PMID: 33907881 PMCID: PMC8236455 DOI: 10.1007/s00280-021-04280-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Chemother Pharmacol ISSN: 0344-5704 Impact factor: 3.333
Demographics
| Subject ID | Gender | Age | Cancer type | Administered drug | Dose administered |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patient 1 | F | 47 | Breast | Epirubicin | 134.58 mg |
| Patient 2 | F | 66 | Breast | Epirubicin | 127 mg |
| Patient 3 | F | 49 | Breast | Epirubicin | 207.16 mg |
| Patient 4 | F | 78 | Breast | Epirubicin | 106 mg |
| Patient 5 | F | 45 | Breast | Epirubicin | 133.76 mg |
| Patient 6 | M | 65 | B cell lymphoma | Doxorubicin | Not documented* |
* Patient 6 received the CHOP regimen with 50 mg doxorubicin/m2, but the exact dose could not be retrieved
Extravasation characteristics
| Subject ID | Affected site | Days until surgery | Size skin erythema (cm) | Size skin necrosis (cm) | Defect coverage | Hospital stay (days) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patient 1 | Forearm | 38 | 5 × 7 | 0.8 × 0.7 | Skin graft | 8 |
| Patient 2 | Cubital fossa | 54 | 5 × 5 | 1 × 1 | Brachioradialis flap | 11 |
| Patient 3 | Forearm | 23 | 13 × 7.5 | 1.5 × 1.5 | Skin graft | 13 |
| Patient 4 | Dorsum of the hand | 46 | 4 × 4 | 1 × 1 | Radial forearm flap | 12 |
| Patient 5 | Pectoral region | 21 | 14 × 6 | 8 × 4 | Latissimus dorsi flap | 16 |
| Patient 6 | Forearm | 26 | 13.5 × 10 | 5 × 2 | Skin graft | 16 |
Individual anthracycline concentrations in tissue (ng anthracycline/100 mg tissue)
| Subject ID | Minimum conc. | Maximum conc. | Central conc. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Patient 1 | 0 | 25 | 25 |
| Patient 2 | 0 | 12 | 0 |
| Patient 3 | 0 | 1402 | 0 |
| Patient 4 | 1 | 3007 | 244 |
| Patient 5 | 3 | 104 | 25 |
| Patient 6 | 0 | 17,451 | 11,819 |
conc. concentration; central concentration refers to the specimen collected at the centre of the necrosis
Fig. 1Doxorubicin tissue distribution after extensive extravasation (subject 6). A 65-year-old male lymphoma patient suffered a doxorubicin extravasation on the right forearm (upper left picture). Surgery was performed 26 days after the incident (lower left picture). The defect was covered with a split-thickness skin graft (upper right picture). HPLC analysis showed a pyramid-shaped distribution pattern with the highest concentrations in the central area, where the extravasation originally happened (lower right picture)
Fig. 2Epirubicin extravasation with substantial tissue distribution (subject 4). A 78-year-old female breast cancer patient suffered an epirubicin extravasation on the dorsum of her left hand. After demarcation, surgery was performed 46 days later. The defect was covered with a radial forearm flap. Indocyanine green video angiography immediately after the extravasation event (lower left picture) already predicted the central necrosis (dark area) and the hypervascularized erythema area (white area). HPLC analysis of the resected tissue showed the highest concentration of epirubicin in the most distal part, most likely due to the effects of gravitation affecting the distal extremities (lower right picture)