Nail disorders in a woman treated with Ixabepilone for metastatic breast cancer


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Date

2005-09-01

Publication Type

Journal Article

ETH Bibliography

no

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Abstract

Ixabepilone (Ix) (BMS-247550®) is a potent member of a new class of microtubule-stabilizing cytotoxic agents known as epothilones. In pre-clinical studies, Ix has shown anticancer activity against several cancer types, including paclitaxel-resistant models, both in vitro and in vivo. The major toxicities associated with Ix are myelosuppression, sensory neuropathy and neutropenia. Other minor side-effects include asthenia/fatigue, stomatitis, anorexia, alopecia, skin reaction, hypersensitivity reactions and a fluid-retention syndrome. Although Ix is functionally correlated to taxanes, no previous evidence exists regarding Ix-related nail disorders. Here, we report a case of a 59-year-old woman treated with Ix at 40 mg/m2 day 1 q 21 days who, after 8 cycles of therapy, developed onycholysis and subungual hemorrhagic bullas in the fingernails.

Publication status

published

Editor

Book title

Volume

25 (5)

Pages / Article No.

3531 - 3532

Publisher

International Institute of Anticancer Research

Event

Edition / version

Methods

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Date collected

Date created

Subject

Nail disorders; ixabepilone; breast cancer

Organisational unit

09703 - Alimonti, Andrea / Alimonti, Andrea check_circle

Notes

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