61 year old male
Chronic myeloid leukaemia
• Initial diagnosis February 2010 with presenting FBC showing Hb 146, WCC 84.5, ANC 50.7, platelets 417, blood film left shifted with typical appearance of chronic myeloid leukaemia
• BM biopsy 19/02/2010 consistent with CML in chronic phase
• Karyotype 46XY, t(9;22)(q34;q11)[20]
• Commenced on Imatinib tyrosine kinase inhibitor therapy
• Changed to Nilotinib late 2010 due to Imatinib intolerance
• Achieved complete molecular remission (CMR) December 2012
• Discontinued Nilotinib 2016 after approximately 4 years of CMR
• Rising PCR September 2016 so recommenced on Nilotinib 400 mg daily
• Regained CMR January 2017
• For ongoing Nilotinib 200 mg BD (patient choice and prior haematologist decision) and 3 monthly blood test disease monitoring
This man has presented with SOB / Cough and a CT scan showed pericardial / pleural fluid.
Cardiac biomarkers of BNP and Troponin were elevated.
ECHO = normal LVEF.
Cardiac catheterisation = moderate proximal LAD stenosis 50-60%.
RV myocardial biopsy = eosinophilic myocarditis NOS ?cause.
Cardiac MRI results awaited.
FBC shows slight neutrophilia. No PB eosinophilia.
The Nilotinib was withheld at presentation.
He is now improving and ready for discharge.
The cardiologists have implicated his Nilotinib as the cause for his eosinophilic myocarditis, presumably by exclusion.
The patient is unsure if he should continue on Nilotinib given what the cardiologists have told him.
I have read some of the TKI / Cardiac SE literature and can’t find any specific reference to Nilotinib and myocarditis.
Do you have any thoughts please on whether Nilotinib could be the culprit here?
Have you seen any myocarditis on Nilotinib?
He has been on the drug for many years with no problems or cardiac SE concerns.
He is presumed to still be in a CMR – updated Q-RT-PCR result awaited.
The LAD lesion will be managed with statin and medical therapy.
Would you consider a change of TKI?