| Literature DB >> 35957865 |
Lingling Wang1, Jiao Tang2, Jun Feng1, Yongfen Huang1, Yuexin Cheng1, Hao Xu1, Yuqing Miao1.
Abstract
Zanubrutinib, a next-generation non-covalent Bruton's tyrosine kinase (BTK) inhibitor, shows great efficacy in the treatment of B cell malignancies. Some patients may experience a series of side effects after the treatment of zanubrutinib. Grade 4 dermatological toxicities are rare, which present as severe rash and skin infection. Herein, we retrospectively reported the grade 4 dermatological toxicities of zanubrutinib in three consecutive patients. They were treated with zanubrutinib 160 mg twice daily orally. One patient was diagnosed with Primary Breast Diffuse Large B-cell Lymphoma(PB-DLBCL) and two patients were diagnosed with Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia(CLL). Within one month after zanubrutinib treatment, all three patients developed grade 4 dermatological toxicities, including bruising, maculopapular rash, petechiae, ecchymosis, hemorrhagic blister, acne-Like rash, papulopustular rash, and skin infections. Zanubrutinib was discontinued in two patients due to unacceptable dermatological toxicities. Safety data from pre-licensing clinical trials showed that zanubrutinib-related side effects were frequent but well tolerated. To date, no severe dermatological toxicities were reported. The majority of patients can be relieved with symptomatic treatment, but a very small percentage of patients may face discontinuation of the drug.Entities:
Keywords: dermatological toxicity; epithelial growth factor receptor; maculopapule rash; papulopustular rash; skin infection; zanubrutinib
Year: 2022 PMID: 35957865 PMCID: PMC9359098 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2022.941633
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 5.738
Figure 1Case 1 : A 71-year-old woman with PB-DLBCL. (A) swelling of the right upper extremity. (B) bruising and skin ecchymoses on the right upper extremity and the right anterior chest wall. (C) The time line of this patient.
Figure 2Case 2 : A 56-year-old man with CLL. (A, C, D) difused and severe maculopapular rash with purpuric lesions on the trunk, upper extremity and lower extremity. (B) necrotizing folliculitis with suspected Staphylococcus aureus superinfection on the back. (E) The time line of this patient.
Figure 3Case 3 : A 69-year-old man with CLL. (A) cutaneous ecchymosis with central necrosis. (B) pustules on the left lower extremity. (C) The time line of this patient.
Incidence Of Zanubrutinib-Associated Dermatological Toxicities.
| Clinical Trial | Phase | B-Cell Malignancies | Patients, No. | Rash | Purpura | Rash Maculo-Papular | Ecchymosis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nct03189524 | 1 | Cll/Sll, Mcl, Wm/Lpl, Fl, Mzl, Hcl, Or Non-Gcb Dlbcl | 44 | 10/44 | 5/44 | 5/44 | – |
| Nct03206918 | 2 | Cll/Sll | 91 | 17/91 | 31/91 | 1/91 | – |
| Nct03206970 | 2 | Mcl | 86 | 31/86 | – | – | – |
| Nct03332173 | 2 | Wm | 44 | 8/44 | 8/44 | – | 4/44 |
| Nct03053440 | 3 | Wm | 129 | No Study Results Posted | |||