Pexidartinib long-term hepatic safety profile in patients with tenosynovial giant cell tumors Journal Article


Authors: Lewis, J. H.; Gelderblom, H.; van de Sande, M.; Stacchiotti, S.; Healey, J. H.; Tap, W. D.; Wagner, A. J.; Pousa, A. L.; Druta, M.; Lin, C. C.; Baba, H. A.; Choi, Y.; Wang, Q.; Shuster, D. E.; Bauer, S.
Article Title: Pexidartinib long-term hepatic safety profile in patients with tenosynovial giant cell tumors
Abstract: Background: Pexidartinib is approved in the U.S. for tenosynovial giant cell tumors (TGCTs). Herein, we assessed the hepatic safety profile of pexidartinib across patients with TGCTs receiving pexidartinib. Materials, and Methods: Hepatic adverse reactions (ARs) were assessed by type and magnitude of liver test abnormalities, classified as (a) isolated aminotransferase elevations (alanine [ALT] or aspartate [AST], without significant alkaline phosphatase [ALP] or bilirubin elevations), or (b) mixed or cholestatic hepatotoxicity (increase in ALP with or without ALT/AST and bilirubin elevations, based on adjudication). Median follow-up from initial pexidartinib treatment was 39 months (range, 32–82) in 140 patients with TGCTs across clinical studies NCT01004861, NCT02371369, NCT02734433, and NCT03291288. Results: In total, 95% of patients with TGCTs (133/140) treated with pexidartinib (median duration of exposure, 19 months [range, 1–76]), experienced a hepatic AR. A total of 128 patients (91%) had reversible, low-grade dose-dependent isolated AST/ALT elevations without significant ALP elevations. Five patients (4%) experienced serious mixed or cholestatic injury. No case met Hy's law criteria. Onset of hepatic ARs was predominantly in the first 2 months. All five serious hepatic AR cases recovered 1–7 months following pexidartinib discontinuation. Five patients from the non-TGCT population (N = 658) experienced serious hepatic ARs, two irreversible cases. Conclusion: This pooled analysis provides information to help form the basis for the treating physician's risk assessment for patients with TCGTs, a locally aggressive but typically nonmetastatic tumor. In particular, long-term treatment with pexidartinib has a predictable effect on hepatic aminotransferases and unpredictable risk of serious cholestatic or mixed liver injury. Implications for Practice: This is the first long-term pooled analysis to report on the long-term hepatic safety of pexidartinib in patients with tenosynovial giant cell tumors associated with severe morbidity or functional limitations and not amenable to improvement with surgery. These findings extend beyond what has been previously published, describing the observed instances of hepatic toxicity following pexidartinib treatment across the clinical development program. This information is highly relevant for medical oncologists and orthopedic oncologists and provides guidance for its proper use for appropriate patients within the Pexidartinib Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Safety program. © 2020 The Authors. The Oncologist published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of AlphaMed Press.
Keywords: long-term; tenosynovial giant cell tumor; adverse reactions; pexidartinib; hepatic safety
Journal Title: The Oncologist
Volume: 26
Issue: 5
ISSN: 1083-7159
Publisher: Oxford University Press  
Date Published: 2021-05-01
Start Page: e863
End Page: e873
Language: English
DOI: 10.1002/onco.13629
PUBMED: 33289960
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC8100574
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 1 June 2021 -- Source: Scopus
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  1. John H Healey
    547 Healey
  2. William Douglas Tap
    372 Tap