Skin adverse events of anti-cancer treatments: An examination of drug-adverse events associations Meeting Abstract


Authors: Salah, S.; Kerob, D.; Pagès, C.; Lacouture, M. E.; Sibaud, V.; Dousset, L.; Khosrotehrani, K.
Abstract Title: Skin adverse events of anti-cancer treatments: An examination of drug-adverse events associations
Meeting Title: 26th Annual Congress of the Cancer Nurses Society of Australia (CNSA)
Abstract: Introduction/Objectives Although anti-cancer treatments, including chemotherapy (CTs), targeted therapies (TTs), radiation therapy, and immunotherapy (ITs), effectively treat cancer, they can cause significant skinrelated toxicities (AEs). These toxicities can lead to discomfort and therapy discontinuation. This study investigated these associations using a large dataset. Materials/Methods The study utilised the US FDA Adverse Reporting System (FAERS) dataset, focusing on Healthcare Professional reports between January 2013 -- September 2022, encompassing 3,399,830 reports, 3084 drugs, and 16,347 AEs. To minimise false positives, we employed a nearest-neighbour matching model on demographics and severity criteria and addressed the inflation of error rates due to the multiplicity of tests. Results We identified 146 marketed anti-cancer drugs in the database with at least five reports of skin AEs. Of the 2757 drug-AE pairs, 708 displayed a significant reporting odds ratio (ROR) >1, involving 102 drugs and 135 skin AEs. Rash was significantly associated with 44 drugs and dry skin with 25 drugs. Methotrexate was significantly associated with 35 different AEs and anti-BRAF vemurafenib with 26 AEs. TTs were present in 57% of the pairs, CTs in 38%, and immune checkpoint blocking agents in 5%. Multikinase inhibitors were present in 15% of the pairs, followed by antimetabolites (14%). Conclusion This study used a large dataset to examine associations between cancer drugs and skin AEs. 146 anti-cancer drugs were found to have skin AEs, with rash and dry skin being the most reported AEs. TTs were most associated with skin AEs, followed by CTs. Methotrexate and vemurafenib had the most significant number of associations. These data don't allow evaluation of skin AE incidence with anti-cancer drugs as they are probably under-reported, but the findings do emphasise the importance of monitoring skin AEs in patients exposed to anti-cancer treatments.
Keywords: risk assessment; neoplasms -- drug therapy; chemotherapy, cancer -- adverse effects; antineoplastic agents -- adverse effects; radiotherapy -- adverse effects; queensland; immunotherapy -- adverse effects; dermatitis medicamentosa -- risk factors; congresses and conferences -- queensland
Journal Title: Australian Journal of Cancer Nursing
Volume: 25
Issue: 1
Meeting Dates: 2024 Jun 19-21
Meeting Location: Brisbane, Australia
ISSN: 1441-2551
Publisher: Cambridge Media  
Date Published: 2024-07-01
Start Page: 65
End Page: 66
Language: English
PROVIDER: EBSCOhost
PROVIDER: cinahl plus with full text
DOI: 10.33235/ajcn.25.1.5-68
DOI/URL:
Notes: Accession Number: 178601785 -- Entry Date: 20240801 -- Revision Date: 20240801 -- Publication Type: Journal Article; abstract; proceedings; research -- Journal Subset: Australia & New Zealand; Double Blind Peer Reviewed; Editorial Board Reviewed; Nursing; Peer Reviewed -- Special Interest: Oncologic Care. -- Source: CINAHL Plus with Full Text
Altmetric
Citation Impact
BMJ Impact Analytics
MSK Authors
  1. Mario E Lacouture
    457 Lacouture