Pulmonary arterial hypertension is known to be a serious but rare adverse event associated with dasatinib therapy. Physicians and general practitioners with patients taking dasatinib are urged to be vigilant for this adverse effect and report any suspected cases of pulmonary arterial hypertension associated with the use of the medicine to the TGA.
Dasatinib (Sprycel) is an oral tyrosine kinase inhibitor approved for the treatment of Philadelphia chromosome positive (Ph+) chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML) and Ph+ acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL).
Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is a rare subtype of pulmonary hypertension, characterised by smooth muscle cell hyperplasia and vascular remodelling of the pulmonary arteries. This results in elevated mean pulmonary arterial pressure (>25 mmHg at rest or >30 mmHg during physical activity) as measured by right heart catheterisation.5
Detection and reporting
In the five years from June 2006, 60 serious cases of pulmonary hypertension were reported worldwide in association with dasatinib use to the sponsor’s global pharmacovigilance database. Of these 60 cases, 36 cases were reported as pulmonary hypertension, and 24 cases were reported as PAH, including a subset of 12 cases of PAH confirmed by right heart catheterisation. In these 12 cases, PAH was reported after initiation of therapy with dasatinib, including after more than one year of therapy. Patients diagnosed with PAH during dasatinib therapy were often taking concomitant medications and had comorbidities in addition to the underlying malignancy.
To date, the TGA has received one report of reversible PAH secondary to dasatinib treatment for CML.
PAH has an insidious onset and patients with early or mild disease may be asymptomatic. Dyspnoea and reduced exercise capacity are typical early symptoms, which may progress to angina, exertional near-syncope, and signs of right heart failure. Given the high degree of clinical suspicion necessary to make the diagnosis, many cases may be undiagnosed and go unreported.
PAH may be at least partially reversible following cessation of dasatinib. Improvements in haemodynamic and clinical parameters have been observed in patients with PAH following cessation of dasatinib therapy.
The potential for a class-effect involving other tyrosine kinase inhibitors has not yet been investigated. The related drugs, imatinib and nilotinib, have not been implicated in reports of PAH to date. Compared with these, dasatinib appears to have a broader range of activity, affecting multiple kinase and non-kinase targets.6 This provides a possible explanation for dasatinib-associated PAH and the observed differences in toxicities of drugs within this therapeutic class.
Important information for prescribers
Before commencing dasatinib therapy, patients should be evaluated for signs and symptoms of underlying cardiopulmonary disease. Patients taking dasatinib who develop symptoms of PAH, such as dyspnoea and fatigue, should be evaluated for more common aetiologies, including pleural effusion, pulmonary oedema, anaemia or lung infiltration. Treatment should be withheld in these patients during evaluation. If no alternative diagnosis is found, the diagnosis of PAH should be considered. If PAH is confirmed, dasatinib should be permanently discontinued. Further information is available in the dasatinib Product Information.7 Prescribers are encouraged to report any suspected cases to the TGA.