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Mechanisms Underpinning Increased Plasma Creatinine Levels in Patients Receiving Vemurafenib for Advanced Melanoma

CONTEXT: Serum creatinine has been reported to increase in patients receiving Vemurafenib, yet neither the prevalence nor the mechanism of this adverse event are known. OBJECTIVE: We aimed to evaluate the frequency and the mechanisms of increases in plasma creatinine level in patients receiving Vemu...

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Autores principales: Hurabielle, Charlotte, Pillebout, Evangéline, Stehlé, Thomas, Pagès, Cécile, Roux, Jennifer, Schneider, Pierre, Chevret, Sylvie, Chaffaut, Cendrine, Boutten, Anne, Mourah, Samia, Basset-Seguin, Nicole, Vidal-Petiot, Emmanuelle, Lebbé, Céleste, Flamant, Martin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4773169/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26930506
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0149873
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author Hurabielle, Charlotte
Pillebout, Evangéline
Stehlé, Thomas
Pagès, Cécile
Roux, Jennifer
Schneider, Pierre
Chevret, Sylvie
Chaffaut, Cendrine
Boutten, Anne
Mourah, Samia
Basset-Seguin, Nicole
Vidal-Petiot, Emmanuelle
Lebbé, Céleste
Flamant, Martin
author_facet Hurabielle, Charlotte
Pillebout, Evangéline
Stehlé, Thomas
Pagès, Cécile
Roux, Jennifer
Schneider, Pierre
Chevret, Sylvie
Chaffaut, Cendrine
Boutten, Anne
Mourah, Samia
Basset-Seguin, Nicole
Vidal-Petiot, Emmanuelle
Lebbé, Céleste
Flamant, Martin
author_sort Hurabielle, Charlotte
collection PubMed
description CONTEXT: Serum creatinine has been reported to increase in patients receiving Vemurafenib, yet neither the prevalence nor the mechanism of this adverse event are known. OBJECTIVE: We aimed to evaluate the frequency and the mechanisms of increases in plasma creatinine level in patients receiving Vemurafenib for advanced melanoma. METHODS: We performed a retrospective monocentric study including consecutive patients treated with Vemurafenib for an advanced melanoma. We collected clinical and biological data concerning renal function before introduction of Vemurafenib and in the course of monthly follow-up visits from March 2013 to December 2014. Cystatin C-derived glomerular filtration rate was evaluated before and after Vemurafenib initiation, as increase in serum cystatin C is specific to a decrease in the glomerular filtration rate. We also performed thorough renal explorations in 3 patients, with measurement of tubular secretion of creatinine before and after Vemurafenib initiation and a renal biopsy in 2 patients. RESULTS: 70 patients were included: 97% of them displayed an immediate, and thereafter stable, increase in creatinine (+22.8%) after Vemurafenib initiation. In 44/52 patients in whom Vemurafenib was discontinued, creatinine levels returned to baseline. Serum cystatin C increased, although proportionally less than serum creatinine, showing that creatinine increase under vemurafenib was indeed partly due to a renal function impairment. In addition, renal explorations demonstrated that Vemurafenib induced an inhibition of creatinine tubular secretion. CONCLUSION: Thus, Vemurafenib induces a dual mechanism of increase in plasma creatinine with both an inhibition of creatinine tubular secretion and slight renal function impairment. However, this side effect is mostly reversible when Vemurafenib is discontinued, and should not lead physicians to discontinue the treatment if it is effective.
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spelling pubmed-47731692016-03-07 Mechanisms Underpinning Increased Plasma Creatinine Levels in Patients Receiving Vemurafenib for Advanced Melanoma Hurabielle, Charlotte Pillebout, Evangéline Stehlé, Thomas Pagès, Cécile Roux, Jennifer Schneider, Pierre Chevret, Sylvie Chaffaut, Cendrine Boutten, Anne Mourah, Samia Basset-Seguin, Nicole Vidal-Petiot, Emmanuelle Lebbé, Céleste Flamant, Martin PLoS One Research Article CONTEXT: Serum creatinine has been reported to increase in patients receiving Vemurafenib, yet neither the prevalence nor the mechanism of this adverse event are known. OBJECTIVE: We aimed to evaluate the frequency and the mechanisms of increases in plasma creatinine level in patients receiving Vemurafenib for advanced melanoma. METHODS: We performed a retrospective monocentric study including consecutive patients treated with Vemurafenib for an advanced melanoma. We collected clinical and biological data concerning renal function before introduction of Vemurafenib and in the course of monthly follow-up visits from March 2013 to December 2014. Cystatin C-derived glomerular filtration rate was evaluated before and after Vemurafenib initiation, as increase in serum cystatin C is specific to a decrease in the glomerular filtration rate. We also performed thorough renal explorations in 3 patients, with measurement of tubular secretion of creatinine before and after Vemurafenib initiation and a renal biopsy in 2 patients. RESULTS: 70 patients were included: 97% of them displayed an immediate, and thereafter stable, increase in creatinine (+22.8%) after Vemurafenib initiation. In 44/52 patients in whom Vemurafenib was discontinued, creatinine levels returned to baseline. Serum cystatin C increased, although proportionally less than serum creatinine, showing that creatinine increase under vemurafenib was indeed partly due to a renal function impairment. In addition, renal explorations demonstrated that Vemurafenib induced an inhibition of creatinine tubular secretion. CONCLUSION: Thus, Vemurafenib induces a dual mechanism of increase in plasma creatinine with both an inhibition of creatinine tubular secretion and slight renal function impairment. However, this side effect is mostly reversible when Vemurafenib is discontinued, and should not lead physicians to discontinue the treatment if it is effective. Public Library of Science 2016-03-01 /pmc/articles/PMC4773169/ /pubmed/26930506 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0149873 Text en © 2016 Hurabielle et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Hurabielle, Charlotte
Pillebout, Evangéline
Stehlé, Thomas
Pagès, Cécile
Roux, Jennifer
Schneider, Pierre
Chevret, Sylvie
Chaffaut, Cendrine
Boutten, Anne
Mourah, Samia
Basset-Seguin, Nicole
Vidal-Petiot, Emmanuelle
Lebbé, Céleste
Flamant, Martin
Mechanisms Underpinning Increased Plasma Creatinine Levels in Patients Receiving Vemurafenib for Advanced Melanoma
title Mechanisms Underpinning Increased Plasma Creatinine Levels in Patients Receiving Vemurafenib for Advanced Melanoma
title_full Mechanisms Underpinning Increased Plasma Creatinine Levels in Patients Receiving Vemurafenib for Advanced Melanoma
title_fullStr Mechanisms Underpinning Increased Plasma Creatinine Levels in Patients Receiving Vemurafenib for Advanced Melanoma
title_full_unstemmed Mechanisms Underpinning Increased Plasma Creatinine Levels in Patients Receiving Vemurafenib for Advanced Melanoma
title_short Mechanisms Underpinning Increased Plasma Creatinine Levels in Patients Receiving Vemurafenib for Advanced Melanoma
title_sort mechanisms underpinning increased plasma creatinine levels in patients receiving vemurafenib for advanced melanoma
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4773169/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26930506
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0149873
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