Abstract

e18794 Background: Dysphonia is a rare and under-reported adverse event. It is associated with the use of several cancer drugs. Dysphonia has been included as possible side effect on packet insert (PI) for some medications, like regorafenib, lenvatinib and axitinib. However, dysphonia has not been reported on multiple other drugs. We aimed to conduct a more comprehensive study to generate signal for dysphonia as adverse effect of drugs used for oncologic indications. Methods: The United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Adverse Events Reporting System (FAERS) database, a pharmacovigilance database, was used to extract data. All reported cases of dysphonia in the database were filtered for an indication of cancer. Descriptive analysis was conducted using SPSS 26. Results: Total 41840 cases of dysphonia were extracted from FAERS database. Out of these, cancer as an indication for medication use was noted in 2996 cases. Dysphonia was reported as side effect of 30 medications. Some of the most common medications were regorafenib (n=463), cabozantinib (290), lenvatinib (178), axitinib (176) and palbociclib (126) as noted in Table. Dysphonia was not listed as adverse reaction on PI for cabozantinib, palbociclib, sorafenib and oxaliplatin. However, it has been reported for regorafenib, lenvatinib and axitinib. Median age at diagnosis was 66 years (interquartile range 59-73). Dysphonia was reported more commonly in males (51.5%) as compared to females (46.2%). Reactions were reported to the FDA more commonly by consumers (53.3% cases) as compared to healthcare professionals (44.5% cases). Conclusions: This study demonstrates signal of developing dysphonia in patients receiving certain cancer directed medications based on FAERS database. It is worth noting that some of the suspect medications identified in this study do not have dysphonia listed as known adverse effect on accompanying package insert. Further studies need to be conducted to confirm if causal relationship exists between use of these drugs and development of dysphonia. Detailed description of five drugs used for oncologic indications with highest reported cases of dysphonia as adverse effect.[Table: see text]

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