Renal Effects of Anti-angiogenesis Therapy: Update for the Internist

Anti-vascular endothelial growth factor therapy is a promising treatment option for patients with many solid cancers. As we learn more about benefits of anti-angiogenesis agents, we should also be aware of their potential adverse reactions.

Abstract
Angiogenesis has become an innovative target in cancer therapy. Agents that inhibit vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), one of the most potent promoters of angiogenesis, and its receptor have significant implications for clinical practice. Bevacizumab, sorafenib, sunitinib and other anti-VEGF drugs are frequently complicated by mild proteinuria and hypertension. Other unique renal effects, such as high-grade proteinuria and acute kidney injury, have been described. The most common histopathologic kidney lesion is thrombotic microangiopathy, with other glomerular lesions and interstitial nephritis occurring less frequently. The mechanism for anti-VEGF therapy-induced hypertension is not well understood; however, nitric oxide pathway inhibition, rarefaction, and oxidative stress may be important in its pathogenesis. Glomerular injury may develop from loss of VEGF effect on maintaining the filtration barrier. Adverse effects of anti-VEGF class of drugs are manageable but require close attention and follow-up. Understanding the fundamentals of anti-VEGF drugs' mechanism of action and their clinical implications is crucial when caring for patients receiving anti-VEGF therapy.



Long-acting Beta-Agonists with and without Inhaled Corticosteroids and Catastrophic Asthma Events


here is a 3-fold increase in asthma-related intubations and deaths in those taking long-acting beta-agonists with concomitant corticosteroids compared to corticosteroids alone, according to this meta-analysis.

Abstract
Background
It is unclear whether long-acting β-agonists with concomitant inhaled corticosteroids increase asthma-related intubations and deaths. We pooled data on long-acting β-agonists with variable and concomitant inhaled corticosteroids to evaluate the risk for catastrophic asthma events.

Methods
We conducted searches of electronic databases, the US Food and Drug Administration website, clinical-trials registries, and selected references through December 2008. We analyzed randomized controlled trials in patients with asthma, which lasted at least 3 months, evaluated long-acting β-agonists compared with placebo or long-acting β-agonists with inhaled corticosteroids compared with corticosteroids alone, and included at least 1 catastrophic event, defined as asthma-related intubation or death.

Results
In pooled trial data that included 36,588 participants, long-acting β-agonists increased catastrophic events 2-fold (Peto odds ratio [OR] 2.10; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.37-3.22). Statistically significant increases were seen for long-acting β-agonists with variable corticosteroids compared with placebo (OR 1.83; 95% CI, 1.14-2.95) and for concomitant treatment with corticosteroids compared with corticosteroids alone (OR 3.65; 95% CI, 1.39-9.55). Similar increases in risk were seen for variable and concomitant corticosteroid use, salmeterol and formoterol, and children and adults. When the analysis was restricted to trials with controlled corticosteroid use, given as part of the study intervention, concomitant treatment still increased catastrophic events compared with corticosteroids alone (OR 8.19; 95% CI, 1.10-61.18).

Conclusion
Long-acting β-agonists increase the risk for asthma-related intubations and deaths, even when used in a controlled fashion with concomitant inhaled corticosteroids.

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