Abstract

Abstract BACKGROUND Gliomas are a known risk factor for the development of spontaneous intracranial hemorrhage (ICH) independent of therapies directed against them, with studies reporting an incidence of 1.9–3.8%. Bevacizumab (BEV) is a humanized monoclonal antibody targeting vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) FDA approved for recurrent glioblastoma. ICH is commonly considered to be a potential adverse effect of BEV use in patients with glioma, with previous retrospective studies describing incidence of intracerebral hemorrhage ranging from 1.9–3.3%. Material and METHODS We performed a single center (Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN) retrospective chart review of all patients who received BEV therapy at our institution for a diagnosis of primary CNS malignancy. We used ICD-9 and ICD-10 codes to identify adult patients with primary CNS neoplasms that subsequently developed ICH. RESULTS We screened 10,507 adult patients with a diagnosis of primary CNS neoplasm treated at our center from 01/31/2008 to 12/31/2018 and found 644 patients treated with bevacizumab. Of these, 23 (3.6%) suffered an ICH within 12 weeks of a BEV infusion (median 9 days post infusion, 1–24 IQR). The dose of BEV in all hemorrhages was either 10 mg/kg every two weeks (n = 21) or 15 mg/kg every three weeks (n = 2). No patients treated with infusions at 7.5 mg/kg every three weeks (n = 79) or 5 mg/kg every two weeks (n = 17) suffered ICH events, however this did not meet significance (P = 0.06) when compared to patients on 10 mg/kg or above. The median ICH score was 1 (0–2 IQR). There was an increase in ECOG scores documented at clinical follow up following the hemorrhage compared to the pre-hemorrhage functional status (ECOG 3.28 versus 1.2, p = < 0.0001), with 13 patients (56%) having developed severe debility or death (ECOG 4 n = 3, ECOG 5 n = 10). CONCLUSION In our single-center cohort of patients with a primary diagnosis of CNS neoplasms treated with BEV, ICH occurred in 3.6% of patients. Those who experienced an ICH in proximity to BEV infusion had significant morbidity and mortality with a clear decline in functional status. There was a signal of dose response as far as ICH incidence in our cohort with dosages 10 mg/kg per infusion or above.

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