Fatal Allergic Reactions Triggered By Common Chemotherapy Drug
Main Category: Lung CancerAlso Included In: Allergy; Breast Cancer; Ovarian Cancer
Article Date: 09 Jun 2009 - 6:00 PDT
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A chemotherapy drug that is supposed to help save cancer patients' lives, instead resulted in life-threatening and sometimes fatal allergic reactions.
A new study from the Research on Adverse Drug Events and Reports (RADAR) pharmacovigilance program at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine identified 287 unique cases of hypersensitivity reactions submitted to the FDA's Adverse Event Report System between 1997 and 2007 with 109 (38 percent) deaths in patients who received Cremophor-based paclitaxel, a solvent-administered taxane chemotherapy.
Adverse event reports generally only represent from 1 to 10 percent of actual incidence, so the number of hypersensitivity reactions and deaths is likely significantly higher. The severe allergic reactions are believed to be caused by Cremophor, the chemical solvent - a derivative of castor oil - that is used to dissolve some insoluble drugs before they can be injected into the blood stream.
Two patients who died from an allergic reaction had early-stage breast cancer, which had been surgically removed, and were being treated with Cremophor-containing paclitaxel to prevent the cancer from coming back. Both of these patients had received medications before the chemotherapy to reduce the risk of hypersensitivity reactions.
The study was led by Charles Bennett, M.D., RADAR program coordinator and a professor of hematology/oncology at Northwestern's Feinberg School, and Dennis Raisch, a professor of pharmacy at the University of New Mexico.
"The deaths of women with early-stage breast cancer are particularly disturbing because without the adverse reaction, they could have likely had 40 years of life ahead of them," Bennett said.
RADAR investigators also found that 22 percent of all fatalities occurred in patients despite patients having received premedication to prevent hypersensitivity reactions, while another 15 percent of such patients experienced life-threatening respiratory arrest.
The report was presented at the 45th Annual Meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology held recently in Orlando, Fla.
Cremophor-containing paclitaxel has been associated with hypersensitivity reactions, with responses ranging from mild skin conditions to more severe effects, including anaphylaxis and cardiac collapse. Current U.S. product labeling for Cremophor containing paclitaxel includes a black-box warning alerting physicians and patients of potential toxicity and recommending the use of corticosteroids and other medications before chemotherapy administration to reduce the risk of hypersensitivity reactions.
"The results of our review suggest that physicians should be vigilant in monitoring the safety of their patients undergoing chemotherapy treatment," said Bennett, who also is the A.C. Buehler Professor in Economics and Aging at the Feinberg School and a member of the Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center of Northwestern University.
"Patients receiving Cremophor-based paclitaxel should be given medications to prevent hypersensitivity reactions, but what is sobering, as the study has shown and as the black-box warning indicates, women suffer anaphylaxis despite receiving steroid premedication," Bennett said. "Physicians should be diligent in reporting adverse events to regulatory agencies to better monitor the impact of Cremophor on patient safety. Physicians may also want to consider exploring other alternative chemotherapy options that do not include Cremophor."
In addition to the two women with early-stage breast cancer who died after treatment with the Cremophor-based paclitaxel, four other women with early-stage breast cancer experienced life-threatening anaphylaxis reactions. Each of them had received prior medications to prevent the reactions.
"The fatal outcomes observed in patients with early-stage breast cancer were particularly striking as this is a patient population with a good prognosis that is generally treated with curative intent," said Raisch.
For the report, Bennett and Raisch reviewed adverse event reports submitted to regulatory agencies in the U.S., Europe and Japan. The most common cancer diagnosis for these patients with allergic reactions was lung cancer followed by breast cancer and ovarian cancer.
Source:
Marla Paul
Northwestern University
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Visitor Opinions In Chronological Order (7)
Nothing New Here
posted by Gail Perry on 9 Jun 2009 at 4:27 pmThese drugs are toxic. That's how come they kill cancer cells. It is a shame that these drugs are not 100% safe in 100% of the people 100% of the time, but they're potent, volatile treatments and it doesn't work that way, unfortunately.
And, by the way, no -- I'm not a doctor and I'm not a pharmaceutical rep. I'm a woman who made that choice and was lucky and didn't have an anaphalactic reaction. I was ready to do anything that would increase my chances of survival.
Allergic Reaction To Taxotere
posted by anon on 22 Nov 2009 at 7:22 pmAfter finally deciding to take the risk of treatment with taxotere for early stage breast cancer, I experienced a severe allergic reaction within the first few minutes of infusion...couldn't breath, chest tightness and palpitations, and horrific wrenching muscle spasms in my back followed by chills after the steroids and benadryl were administered to reverse the effect.
I feel I was fortunate to have attentive staff who reacted quickly and were able to reverse the reaction. It was disappointing that I was unable to avail myself of an opportunity to increase my chances of survival, and I hope one day there will be a medication for those of us who are hypersensitive.
Chemotherapy reaction near fatal
posted by TC on 14 Oct 2010 at 4:27 amAfter an early stage one cancer removal and the completion of nearly the end of the final sixth round of preventative chemotherapy... my mother went into shock and her heart raced to 132 beats a minute. She had immediate severe congestion in her head and lungs and could not breathe.
The perfect course of diagnosis, operation and treatment came to a sudden and life changing halt.
Although she was administered benadryl and was saved.. the next few days were miserable. She was tied up in a bureaucratic nightmare as nurses in a top NYC hospital made errors in obtaining an ambulance which took over one hour to take her from her outpatient location to another location with cardiac doctors.
At the next location what was once thought to be the top treatment hospital in the world, had a "critical care" unit that was really a typical emergency room - an ironic name for a place where people are "triaged" which means left in cots or chairs for hours while no doctor is anywhere to be seen.
It is an American horror that this is commonplace in hospitals across the country.
She finally saw a young woman doctor many many hours later and was moved to a room for observation. However after staying overnight and through to part of the afternoon, she was released as no promise that the cardiac doctors would get to her that next day or evening.
This was after a depression came in on the EKG showing that she had a time during the incident in which her heart received no air.
The next EKG showed it had corrected itself. We don't know if it is corrected or if heart damage occurred.
We are sure that it wasn't good for her... but are grateful there were doctors who originally operated and treated her to save her life.
The glaring gap in treatment is the risk to the patient’s heart and the complete absence of an imagined team of doctors that was never actually present at either the in patient or outpatient hospitals.
We are told they are getting a new wing with cardiac doctors within a month, but this was not present during this October 2010 reaction for this one patient who is my only mother.
Therefore, be vigilant and talk to the hospital administration office before being herded like cattle into an infirmary to a place where no doctors exist for crowds of people in distress even those sent by ambulance and by other doctors.
Hospital administrators and presidents of hospitals get fired all the time for a reason. The primary reason is that America's hospital's are expensive to run and severely understaffed and often overwhelmed by masses of ailing people even at the very best hospitals.
All college aid should be skewed to help fund medical training so we increase the number of and level of medical professionals while driving down the prices of such "rare" healthcare providers.
America needs to take a healthcare initiative to assist all bright promising science oriented students to medicine. We are short of care.
Kate
posted by Kate Rufus on 6 Feb 2011 at 2:24 pmI am a 38yr old woman who was given Paclitaxel after an allergic reaction to Docetaxel. My second treatment was painful; it felt as though someone was kneeling on my arm. A saline drip was piggybacked onto it to dilute it. For about 10 days after treatment I had big red patches all up the forearm in which the drug had been adminstered. The third dose resulted in anaphylactic shock after about ten minutes, despite steroids and all other pre-meds. The speed and skill of the nurses on the ward saved me. I want to warn anyone having this drug to be alert to pain during treatment, or a rash developing as a possible warning that an allergic reaction may be likely if increased sensitivity is experienced.
Chemotherapy
posted by Gabby on 1 Mar 2011 at 3:57 pmAfter my 45 year old mother passed away, my dad and I could not shake the feeling that the chemotherapy had something to do with it!
These stories all sound too familiar. My mother was healthy and up and walking around at about 5.00 pm, she was then administered with chemotherapy.. She was nervous but did so in knowing that it was her only chance for survival. About 15 minutes in, she began feeling extreme abdominal and back pain that was making her unable to talk. She was crippled over in bed so we called a nurse.
They told us it's just the burning sensation of reflux. But we knew it wasn't right. A doctor was later called as her condition worsened and he just said the same thing.
My mother knew something was wrong and everyone seemed to be pushing it aside. By the end of the night her breathing had gotten so bad that she could not walk to the toilet and my father had to carry her!
We left the hospital for the night and got a call from the nurses in the morning saying her breathing had changed and to come in. We got there as quick as we could and by the time we did she had experienced 'heart failure'. Forgive me if this is just coincidence but I truly believe she had a reaction. No one in that hospital was near vigilant enough.
For others, chemotherapy is toxic. Hence why it 'kills' cancer. I am happy for those whose doctors were vigilant to pick up on the reactions..
Chemo
posted by Bridget on 8 Dec 2011 at 5:54 amMy 67 yr.old mother was diagnosed June 20th with lung cancer while hospitalized for lymphodema of her leg. She was appehensive with starting the chemo, but went ahead with it because her Physicians couldn't make up their minds if she was in stage 1 or 3. She had her first treatment via pic line, while in the hospital and all went well(June 27). A week later, she was administered the second dose(July 1ST) and sent home over the holiday week- end. She became physically ill, unstable on her feet and had a fever of 104 within 3 days of discharge. We called a ambulance and she was re-admitted to the hospital(July5). After she was assigned a room, myself and my family went home for the night.We received a call explaining my mom had trouble breathing during the night, was moved to intensive care and placed on a ventilator. My mothers organs started failing and she passed away on July 22. The Doctors tried to blame it on the cancer but I believe if she didn't have the chemo, she would be celebrating the holidays with her family.
So sorry
posted by Debbie on 5 Jan 2012 at 6:07 pmI am so sorry to all of you that have lost a loved one. Cancer doesn't kill people they end up dying from complications from chemo. Again so sorry to all of you. My mother in law 68 yrs old was recently diagnosed with stage 4 lymphoma. Terrible horrific unthinkiable pain she is suffering all because of the complications from chemo.
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