Huang Ivan J, Baek Grace T, Cohen Jonathan, Khajaviyan Sirin, Louie Stephanie, Samples Laura, Smith Stephen D, Till Brian G, Warren Edus H, Gopal Ajay K, Poh Christina, Lynch Ryan C, Ujjani Chaitra S, Shadman Mazyar
Department of Pharmacy, UW Medicine, Seattle, WA.
Department of Pharmacy, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center, Seattle, WA.
JCO Oncol Pract. 2025 May;21(5):671-676. doi: 10.1200/OP.24.00416. Epub 2024 Nov 18.
Venetoclax is the standard of care for chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL)/small lymphocytic lymphoma (SLL) but requires intensive monitoring for optimal safety. Clinical relevance of intensive monitoring in practice is unknown, especially for patients with low or intermediate risk for tumor lysis syndrome (TLS).
A retrospective review was conducted to determine clinical significance of monitoring for TLS during standard ramp-up for patients with CLL/SLL. Patients receiving abbreviated ramp-up, clinical trials, or concurrent Bruton tyrosine kinase inhibitors were excluded. The primary end point was TLS incidence, with secondary end points describing associated clinical interventions.
Fifty-five patients met study criteria. The majority of patients received venetoclax as first-line therapy (58%), with anti-CD20 antibody therapy (82%), and were at low risk of TLS (75%). No clinical TLS events occurred, whereas laboratory TLS occurred in only 1.8% of patients. No patients required antihyperuricemic therapy, and few interventions for hyperphosphatemia or hypocalcemia (3.6% of patients) were required. Additional intravenous fluids were uncommonly required (1.8% of patients), and no unplanned hospitalizations were required.
These findings support efforts to reduce intensive monitoring requirements during venetoclax ramp-up for patients with CLL, potentially increasing accessibility of venetoclax.