4.7 Article

Hypertension and incident cardiovascular events after next-generation BTKi therapy initiation

Journal

JOURNAL OF HEMATOLOGY & ONCOLOGY
Volume 15, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13045-022-01302-7

Keywords

Hypertension; Cardiovascular events; Acalabrutinib; Cancer-targeted therapy; Cardio-oncology

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH)/National Cancer Institute (NCI) [K23-CA178183, R01-CA197870, R35-CA197734, K12-CA133250, K23-HL155890]
  2. Leukemia & Lymphoma Society [CDP 2331-20]
  3. Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
  4. American Heart Association
  5. D. Warren Brown Foundation
  6. Four Winds Foundations
  7. Connie Brown CLL Foundation

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This study aimed to evaluate the association between first-generation Bruton's tyrosine kinase inhibitor (BTKi) therapy, ibrutinib, and novel selective second-generation BTKi therapy, acalabrutinib, with hypertension. The results showed that nearly half of the patients treated with acalabrutinib developed new or worsened hypertension. Furthermore, early systolic blood pressure increase was associated with an increased risk of major cardiovascular events.
Background Post-market analyses revealed unanticipated links between first-generation Bruton's tyrosine kinase inhibitor (BTKi) therapy, ibrutinib, and profound early hypertension. Yet, whether this is seen with novel selective second (next)-generation BTKi therapy, acalabrutinib, is unknown. Methods Leveraging a large cohort of consecutive B cell cancer patients treated with acalabrutinib from 2014 to 2020, we assessed the incidence and ramifications of new or worsened hypertension [systolic blood pressure (SBP) >= 130 mmHg] after acalabrutinib initiation. Secondary endpoints were major cardiovascular events (MACE: arrhythmias, myocardial infarction, stroke, heart failure, cardiac death) and disease progression. Observed incident hypertension rates were compared to Framingham heart-predicted and ibrutinib-related rates. Multivariable regression and survival analysis were used to define factors associated with new/worsened hypertension and MACE, and the relationship between early SBP increase and MACE risk. Further, the effect of standard antihypertensive classes on the prevention of acalabrutinib-related hypertension was assessed. Results Overall, from 280 acalabrutinib-treated patients, 48.9% developed new/worsened hypertension over a median of 41 months. The cumulative incidence of new hypertension by 1 year was 53.9%, including 1.7% with high-grade (>= 3) hypertension. Applying the JNC 8 cutoff BP of >= 140/90 mmHg, the observed new hypertension rate was 20.5% at 1 year, > eightfold higher than the Framingham-predicted rate of 2.4% (RR 8.5, P < 0.001), yet 34.1% lower than ibrutinib (12.9 observed-to-expected ratio, P < 0.001). In multivariable regression, prior arrhythmias and Black ancestry were associated with new hypertension (HR 1.63, HR 4.35, P < 0.05). The degree of SBP rise within 1 year of treatment initiation predicted MACE risk (42% HR increase for each + 5 mmHg SBP rise, P < 0.001). No single antihypertensive class prevented worsened acalabrutinib-related hypertension. Conclusions Collectively, these data suggest that hypertension may be a class effect of BTKi therapies and precedes major cardiotoxic events.

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