Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/11000/30798

Differential presentation of hypersensitivity reactions to carboplatin and oxaliplatin: Phenotypes, endotypes, and management with desensitization

Title:
Differential presentation of hypersensitivity reactions to carboplatin and oxaliplatin: Phenotypes, endotypes, and management with desensitization
Authors:
Jimenez-Rodriguez, Teodorikez-Wilfox
de las Vecillas, Leticia
Labella, Marina  
Lynch, Donna-Marie  
Besz, Kylie Marie
Marquis, Kathleen
Burgos, Amparo
Soriano Gomis, Victor  
Lozano , Inmaculada  
Montoyo Antón, Rosana Ana
Marco de la Calle, Francisco
González Delgado, María Purificación
Gutiérrez, Aurora
Montenegro, Estefanía
Rodríguez, Fernando
Fernández Sánchez, Francisco Javier  
Castells, Mariana  
Editor:
Wiley
Department:
Departamentos de la UMH::Medicina Clínica
Issue Date:
2023
URI:
https://hdl.handle.net/11000/30798
Abstract:
Background: Drug hypersensitivity reactions (DHRs) to platinum-based drugs are heterogenous and restrict their access, and drug desensitization (DD) has provided a ground-breaking procedure for their re-introduction, although the response is heterogeneous. We aimed to identify the phenotypes, endotypes, and biomarkers of reactions to carboplatin and oxaliplatin and their response to DD. Methods: Seventy-nine patients presenting with DHRs to oxaliplatin (N = 46) and carboplatin (N = 33) were evaluated at the Allergy Departments of two tertiary care hospitals in Spain. Patient symptoms, skin testing, biomarkers, and outcomes of 267 DDs were retrospectively analyzed. Results: Oxaliplatin-reactive patients presented with type I (74%), cytokine release reaction (CRR) (11%), and mixed (Mx) (15%) phenotypes. In contrast, carboplatin reactive patients presented with predominantly type I (85%) and Mx (15%) but no CRRs. Out of 267 DDs, breakthrough reactions (BTRs) to oxaliplatin occurred twice as frequently as carboplatin (32% vs. 15%; p < .05). Phenotype switching from type I to another phenotype was observed in 46% of oxaliplatin DDs compared to 21% of carboplatin DDs. Tryptase was elevated in type I and Mx reactions, and IL-6 in CRR and Mx, indicating different mechanisms and endotypes. Conclusion: Carboplatin and oxaliplatin induced three different types of reactions with defined phenotypes and endotypes amendable to DD. Although most of the initial reactions for both were type I, oxaliplatin presented with unique CRR reactions. During DD, carboplatin reactive patients presented mostly type I BTR, while oxaliplatin-reactive patients frequently switched from type I to CRR, providing a critical difference and the need for personalized DD protocols.
Keywords/Subjects:
carboplatin
desensitization
endophenotype
hypersensitivity
oxaliplatin
Type of document:
application/pdf
Access rights:
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1111/all.15940
Appears in Collections:
Artículos Medicina Clínica



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