4.2 Article

Cyclophosphamide-induced cardiotoxicity at conditioning for allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation would occur among the patients treated with 120 mg/kg or less

Journal

ASIA-PACIFIC JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY
Volume 18, Issue 5, Pages E507-E514

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ajco.13674

Keywords

allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (allo-HSCT); cyclophosphamide (CY); haploidentical-HSCT; heart failure; intensive care unit (ICU)

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Cyclophosphamide (CY)-induced cardiotoxicity is rare but potentially lethal. Lowering the dose of CY can reduce the risk of heart failure, but even doses below 120 mg/kg can still cause cardiotoxicity.
Cyclophosphamide (CY)-induced cardiotoxicity involves rare lethal complications. We previously reported the cardiac events of 811 allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant (allo-HSCT) recipients; 12 out of 811 recipients (1.5%) developed fatal heart failure. The mortality rate was also very high (91.6%, 11/12). CY dose (200 mg/kg or more) was reported as the independent risk factor. The main disease in patients treated with 200 mg/kg or more of CY was severe aplastic anemia (AA). Therefore, we reduced the dose of CY during conditioning for AA (from 200 to 100 mg/kg), and then we analyzed the clinical features of 294 patients who received a total dose of at least 100 mg/kg of CY. We also compared the clinical features between the current study and our previous study. The proportion of patients treated with at least 200 mg/kg of CY was reduced from 4.2% to 0%. However, CY-induced heart failure occurred in four of the 294 patients (1.4%), which was similar to the finding reported in our previous study (1.5%). Two of these four patients received a post-transplant CY (PTCy) regimen (CY 100 mg/kg). All four patients were treated in the cardiac intensive care unit (C-ICU), and two patients survived. In summary, even the CY dose of 120 mg/kg or less would cause cardiotoxicity. We should also carefully monitor patients treated with PTCy, considering the possibility of CY-induced cardiotoxicity. Early diagnosis and ICU management have contributed to improved outcomes.

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