Sebuhyan M, Crichi B, Abdallah N Ait, Bonnet C, Deville L, Marjanovic Z, Farge D
Unité de médecine interne : maladies auto-immunes et pathologie vasculaire (UF04), hôpital Saint-Louis, Assistance publique des Hôpitaux de Paris (APHP), 1 avenue Claude-Vellefaux, 75010 Paris, France.
Unité de médecine interne : maladies auto-immunes et pathologie vasculaire (UF04), hôpital Saint-Louis, Assistance publique des Hôpitaux de Paris (APHP), 1 avenue Claude-Vellefaux, 75010 Paris, France.
J Med Vasc. 2020 Nov;45(6S):6S31-6S38. doi: 10.1016/S2542-4513(20)30517-4.
Cancer-associated thrombosis (CAT) is the second leading cause of death in cancer patients after tumor progression. The treatment of CAT is challenging because of a high risk of VTE recurrence, a high risk of bleeding, common presence of comorbidities, poly-medication, and potential drug-drug interactions (DDI). Since 2018, direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs) represent a promising therapeutic alternative and have been recently included into the 2019 update of the International Initiative on Thrombosis and Cancer (ITAC-CME) clinical practice guidelines for management of CAT. However, pharmacokinetic studies suggest that concomitant treatment with P-gp or CYP3A4 inhibitors will result in an increased exposure to rivaroxaban and apixaban, but the clinical relevance of these studies is unknown. In addition, there is an important inter-individual variability in drug absorption, distribution, metabolism and elimination, even more in cancer patients. Overall, the risk of pharmacokinetic DDI should be estimated based on several individual (patient age, renal and liver function, number of comedications) and diseases-related factors, including inflammation, sarcopenia, and low body weight. In this context, DDI with clinical implications could be expected with anti-neoplastic agents or supportive care treatments, especially with drugs known to be moderate or strong inhibitors/inducers of CYP3A4 and P-gp. Consequently, in the presence of potential DDIs through CYP3A4, and/or P-gp, LMWHs remain the first-line anticoagulant of choice for the long-term treatment of CAT. Multidisciplinary consultation meetings and therapeutic patient education should be emphasized in the complex management of CAT.
癌症相关血栓形成(CAT)是癌症患者继肿瘤进展之后的第二大死亡原因。CAT的治疗具有挑战性,因为静脉血栓栓塞(VTE)复发风险高、出血风险高、合并症常见、多种药物联合使用以及存在潜在的药物相互作用(DDI)。自2018年以来,直接口服抗凝剂(DOACs)是一种有前景的治疗选择,最近已被纳入2019年更新的国际血栓形成与癌症倡议(ITAC-CME)关于CAT管理的临床实践指南。然而,药代动力学研究表明,与P-糖蛋白或CYP3A4抑制剂联合治疗会导致利伐沙班和阿哌沙班的暴露增加,但这些研究的临床相关性尚不清楚。此外,药物吸收、分布、代谢和消除存在重要的个体间差异,在癌症患者中差异更大。总体而言,应基于几个个体因素(患者年龄、肾和肝功能、合并用药数量)以及疾病相关因素(包括炎症、肌肉减少症和低体重)来评估药代动力学DDI的风险。在这种情况下,抗肿瘤药物或支持性护理治疗可能会出现具有临床意义的DDI,尤其是已知为CYP3A4和P-糖蛋白的中度或强效抑制剂/诱导剂的药物。因此,在存在通过CYP3A4和/或P-糖蛋白的潜在DDI时,低分子肝素(LMWHs)仍然是CAT长期治疗的一线抗凝剂选择。在CAT的复杂管理中应强调多学科咨询会议和治疗性患者教育。