Variance in development of early and late cardiotoxicities in patients with lymphoma and myeloma receiving CAR T-cell therapies.

Journal: Leukemia & Lymphoma
Published:
Abstract

Cardiovascular adverse events (CVAEs) are recognized complications of chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapies. However, data are lacking regarding subtypes of adverse events that develop in patients with different malignancies, and little is known about the timeframe in which different cardiotoxicities are most likely to occur post-CAR T-cell therapies. In this study, 211 patients, including 138 lymphoma patients and 66 myeloma patients who received CAR T-cell therapies were retrospectively identified. Of these, 42 patients (19.9%) developed CVAEs post-treatment. Myeloma patients predominantly experienced heart failure while lymphoma patients predominantly experienced arrhythmia. Severe CVAEs were observed even at >12 months post-treatment. Lower baseline global longitudinal strain was significantly associated with development of post-CAR T-cell therapy CVAEs in both lymphoma and myeloma patients. These findings highlight the spectra of post-CAR T-cell cardiotoxicities in lymphoma and myeloma patients and the importance of echocardiography for pretreatment risk stratification and long-term surveillance.

Authors
Eli Grunblatt, Zhiying Meng, Abigail Baldridge, Nikita Patel, Alexander Stanisic, Matthew Feinstein, Anjali Rao, Leo Gordon, Jane Winter, Shuo Ma, Jayesh Mehta, Seema Singhal, Reem Karmali, Nausheen Akhter