Cardiovascular events among 1090 cancer patients treated with sunitinib, interferon, or placebo: A comprehensive adjudicated database analysis demonstrating clinically meaningful reversibility of cardiac events Journal Article


Authors: Ewer, M. S.; Suter, T. M.; Lenihan, D. J.; Niculescu, L.; Breazna, A.; Demetri, G. D.; Motzer, R. J.
Article Title: Cardiovascular events among 1090 cancer patients treated with sunitinib, interferon, or placebo: A comprehensive adjudicated database analysis demonstrating clinically meaningful reversibility of cardiac events
Abstract: Purpose To define cardiovascular (CV) risk and reversibility of cardiac events in patients who received sunitinib versus comparator treatment (interferon-alfa or placebo). Patients and methods We performed a retrospective adjudication of comprehensive CV adverse events (AEs) from two phase 3 trials. Components of the comprehensive CV AE end-point comprised hypertension, symptomatic and asymptomatic left ventricular ejection fraction decreases (SD-LVEF; AD-LVEF) and extent of reversibility, heart-failure symptoms, thromboembolic events, dysrhythmia and CV death. Three cardiologists and one oncologist, blinded to treatment allocation, adjudicated suspected CV AEs in the pooled trial database (N = 1090). Results Incidence rates (IR) for sunitinib versus Interferon-alfa (IFN-α)/placebo were hypertension: 6.9 versus 2.6 (hazard ratio (HR), 3.1; 95% confidence interval (CI), 2.4-4.0); SD-LVEF: 0.4 versus 0.2 (HR, 2.5; 95% CI, 1.0-6.2); AD-LVEF: 1.1 versus 0.8 (HR, 2.1; 95% CI, 1.3-3.4); and composite CV AE end-point: 10.1 versus 4.8 (HR, 2.5; 95% CI, 2.0-3.1), however reversibility, not previously quantified, was found to be clinically meaningful. Conclusions Hypertension and SD-LVEF/AD-LVEF were significantly higher with sunitinib versus IFN-α/placebo. Among patients who experienced a cardiac event, symptomatic and asymptomatic instances of decreased cardiac dysfunction were adjudicated as reversible in 47 of 83 (56%) and 17 of 30 (57%), respectively. Among sunitinib-treated patients, many were able to resume sunitinib dosing following resolution of events, a finding that is important for clinical care. In comparator groups, symptomatic and asymptomatic instances were adjudicated as reversible in 4 of 6 (66.7%) and 11 of 21 (52%), respectively. Thromboembolic, dysrhythmic and/or CV deaths were not significantly higher in sunitinib-treated patients. © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Keywords: sunitinib; cardiotoxicity; cancer treatment-related hypertension; reversibility of cardiotoxic events
Journal Title: European Journal of Cancer
Volume: 50
Issue: 12
ISSN: 0959-8049
Publisher: Elsevier Inc.  
Date Published: 2014-08-01
Start Page: 2162
End Page: 2170
Language: English
DOI: 10.1016/j.ejca.2014.05.013
PROVIDER: scopus
PUBMED: 24930624
DOI/URL:
Notes: Export Date: 1 August 2014 -- CODEN: EJCAE -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Robert Motzer
    1243 Motzer