Secondary Dysgammaglobulinemia in Children with Hematological Malignancies Treated with Targeted Therapies

被引:0
作者
Athanasios Tragiannidis
Andreas H. Groll
机构
[1] Aristotle University of Thessaloniki,Childhood and Adolescent Hematology Oncology Unit, 2nd Pediatric Department, Faculty of Health Sciences
[2] AHEPA Hospital,Infectious Disease Research Program, Center for Bone Marrow Transplantation and Department of Pediatric Hematology/Oncology
[3] University Children’s Hospital Münster,undefined
来源
Pediatric Drugs | 2021年 / 23卷
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摘要
Targeted therapies have emerged as innovative treatments for patients whose disease does not respond to conventional chemotherapy, and their use has widely expanded in the field of pediatric hematologic malignancies in the last decade. While they carry the promise of improved disease control and survival and are currently investigated in first-line treatment protocols for patients with poor prognostic markers, they are associated with a considerable incidence of specific toxicities, including cytokine-release syndrome, neurotoxicity, hepatotoxicity, nephrotoxicity, cardiotoxicity, endocrine adverse events, and infectious complications. Iatrogenic or secondary dysgammaglobulinemia is a main consequence of targeted therapies using monoclonal antibodies and other antibody-derived treatments that target specific antigens on lymphoid cells (blinatumomab, inotuzumab ozogamicin, rituximab), chimeric antigen receptor T cells, tyrosine kinase inhibitors (imatinib, dasatinib, nilotinib) and, to a lesser extent, checkpoint inhibitors (pembrolizumab, nivolumab). This review discusses the diagnosis and incidence of secondary or iatrogenic dysgammaglobulinemia in children treated with targeted therapies for leukemias and lymphomas, and options for monitoring and treatment.
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页码:445 / 455
页数:10
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