Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2128786 European Journal of Cancer Supplements 2008 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

Bevacizumab has been administered to more than 200,000 cancer patients globally. This wealth of information has demonstrated that bevacizumab-associated adverse events are similar across indications. Commonly reported events with bevacizumab are hypertension (in up to 34% of patients), proteinuria (in up to 38% of patients) and haemorrhage (mucocutaneous haemorrhage in 20–40% of patients), most of which are grade 1–2 in severity. Less frequent events include arterial and venous thromboembolic events (ATEs, VTEs), congestive heart failure/cardiomyopathy, wound-healing complications and gastrointestinal perforations. These bevacizumab-associated events have also been reported in two phase III trials of bevacizumab in combination with chemotherapy (capecitabine [AVF2119g] or paclitaxel [E2100]) in advanced breast cancer. Overall, these adverse events are not dose-related in any indication (except for hypertension and grade 1 proteinuria). Furthermore, the most frequently reported bevacizumab-associated adverse events are mild/moderate in severity and are easily managed. Recommendations for the management of bevacizumab-related adverse events include regular monitoring (hypertension, proteinuria); use of standard care (hypertension, VTEs); temporary dose interruption (hypertension, proteinuria, VTEs, wound healing) to permanent discontinuation of treatment (for all severe events).

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