학술논문

Bleeding events in bevacizumab-treated cancer patients who received full-dose anticoagulation and remained on study.
Document Type
Journal Article
Source
British Journal of Cancer. 2/1/2011, Vol. 104 Issue 3, p413-418. 6p. 1 Diagram, 2 Charts.
Subject
*CANCER patients
*BEVACIZUMAB
*HEMORRHAGE
*COLON cancer
*PLACEBOS
*VASCULAR endothelial growth factors
*NEOVASCULARIZATION
*CANCER chemotherapy
*ANTICOAGULANTS
*THERAPEUTIC use of monoclonal antibodies
*VENOUS thrombosis prevention
*CLINICAL trials
*COMPARATIVE studies
*RESEARCH methodology
*MEDICAL cooperation
*MONOCLONAL antibodies
*NEOVASCULARIZATION inhibitors
*RESEARCH
*VENOUS thrombosis
*TUMORS
*EVALUATION research
*RETROSPECTIVE studies
*DISEASE complications
*THERAPEUTICS
Language
ISSN
0007-0920
Abstract
Background: Bevacizumab provides clinical benefit in multiple solid tumours, but is associated with some increase in bleeding risk. Thrombotic events necessitating therapeutic anticoagulation (TA) are common in cancer. This report describes the safety of concurrent bevacizumab and TA in three large placebo-controlled clinical studies.Methods: Study 1 (metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC)), study 2 (mCRC), and study 3 (advanced non-small cell lung cancer) were blinded phase III studies. Eligibility criteria excluded patients on TA. Patients on protocol treatment who developed thrombotic events requiring TA were permitted to continue bevacizumab or placebo under specified conditions. Adverse events in patients who received bevacizumab and TA concurrently were assessed using the NCI-CTCAE scale.Results: While experience is limited, venous thrombotic events were the most common reason for TA initiation in the three studies. Severe bleeding event rates for patients receiving TA in the bevacizumab-treated groups were similar in frequency to the placebo groups, ranging from 0 to 8% or 0 to 67 events per 100 patient-years. No severe pulmonary bleeding was reported in any of the TA-treated populations.Conclusions: These data suggest that bevacizumab did not increase the risk of severe bleeding in cancer patients who received TA. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]