Acute-on-chronic liver failure following eribulin treatment for metastatic breast cancer: a case report.
Xiao-Feng XieJia-Yi HuangLi-Ping ChenXiao-Feng LanQiu-Yi ZhangLin SongXue- BaiCai-Wen DuPublished in: The Journal of international medical research (2022)
The efficacy and tolerability of eribulin mesylate, a synthetic halichondrin B analog, in patients with metastatic breast cancer (MBC) previously treated with anthracyclines and taxanes have been established. Acute-on-chronic liver failure (ACLF) is a clinical syndrome manifesting as acute and severe hepatic derangement resulting from varied insults in patients with established chronic liver disease or cirrhosis who did not previously receive eribulin. A middle-aged woman diagnosed with MBC and diffuse liver metastases who was pretreated with multi-line chemotherapy received eribulin as eighth-line chemotherapy and presented with hepatic encephalopathy, rapid bilirubin elevation, and significant coagulation dysfunction on day 4 in cycle 1. The patient was diagnosed with ACLF induced by eribulin. Therefore, ACLF may be a lethal and rare adverse event when patients with chronic liver metastases receive eribulin treatment, and clinicians' awareness should be increased for optimal prevention and prompt diagnosis and treatment.
Keyphrases
- metastatic breast cancer
- liver failure
- liver metastases
- hepatitis b virus
- middle aged
- case report
- early onset
- emergency department
- randomized controlled trial
- locally advanced
- palliative care
- oxidative stress
- clinical trial
- radiation therapy
- open label
- respiratory failure
- adverse drug
- newly diagnosed
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- chronic myeloid leukemia
- phase ii
- electronic health record
- phase iii