Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

Renal Safety Profile of EGFR Targeted Therapies: A Study from VigiBase® the WHO Global Database of Individual Case Safety Reports

14

Citations

20

References

2021

Year

Abstract

Kidney EGFR expression together with reported cases of glomerular diseases in the context of anti-EGFR drug administration raise concerns about the renal safety profile of these drugs. This issue is addressed in a case/non-case study carried out on VigiBase<sup>®</sup>, the WHO global database of individual case safety reports (ICRS). Disproportionality analysis of renal adverse effects related to the selected anti-EGFR drugs, erlotinib, gefitinib, afatinib, osimertinib, cetuximab and panitumumab, was assessed using the reporting odds ratio (ROR). Nine hundred and eighty-nine ICRSs were included. A signal of disproportionate reporting (SDR) was found for afatinib (ROR = 2.70; 95% CI [2.22-3.29]) and erlotinib (ROR = 1.73; 95% CI [1.46-2.04]) with acute kidney injury, and for afatinib (ROR = 2.41; 95% CI [1.78-3.27]), cetuximab (ROR = 1.42; 95% CI [1.14-1.78]) and erlotinib (ROR = 2.23; 95% CI [1.80-2.77]) with renal failure. The preferred term "diarrhoea" was frequently reported in the included cases. An SDR was found for erlotinib with haemolytic and uremic syndrome (ROR = 4.01; 95% CI [1.80-8.94]) and thrombotic microangiopathy (ROR = 4.94; 95% CI [2.80-8.72]). No SDR was seen for glomerular or tubule-interstitial diseases. This study showed that the anti-EGFR drug renal toxicity is mainly related to renal failure in the context of digestive toxicity.

References

YearCitations

Page 1