Severe cardiotoxicity in a patient with colorectal cancer treated with bevacizumab

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Abstract

Background/Aim: Bevacizumab combined with standard chemotherapeutics has become a choice of treatment for several kinds of cancers. Hypertension, third-degree albuminuria, thrombosis and cardiotoxicity are the reported side-effects of bevacizumab. Among them, cardiotoxicity is a most severe, but rare outcome. We report a case of a 62-yearold female with colorectal carcinoma who was given bevacizumab-containing chemotherapy for more than 20 months and achieved a stable disease during the entire course of treatment. Thereafter, she developed cardiotoxicity including grade 3 hypertension, tricuspid regurgitation, pulmonary hypertension, left ventricular diastolic dysfunction and pericardial effusion, and was discontinued from the regimen with bevacizumab. Conclusion: Although clinicallyeffective, the severe cardiotoxicity of bevacizumab developed after over 20 courses of treatment prompted us to look for optimal chemotherapy prescription in order to achieve a better clinical outcome.

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Chen, J., Du, F., Hu, B., Chi, C., Chu, H., Jiang, L., … Gong, Z. (2017). Severe cardiotoxicity in a patient with colorectal cancer treated with bevacizumab. In Anticancer Research (Vol. 37, pp. 4557–4561). International Institute of Anticancer Research. https://doi.org/10.21873/anticanres.11853

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