Carfilzomib-associated thrombotic microangiopathy: clinical features and outcomes

Nephrol Dial Transplant. 2024 Apr 24:gfae096. doi: 10.1093/ndt/gfae096. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Background and hypothesis: Carfilzomib, a new proteasome inhibitor indicated for patients with relapsed/refractory myeloma, has been associated with cases of thrombotic microangiopathy (CFZ-TMA). The role of variants in the complement alternative pathway and therapeutic potential of complement blockade with eculizumab remain to be determined.

Methods: We report 37 cases of CFZ-TMA recorded in the French reference center for TMA with their clinical characteristics, genetic analysis and outcome according to treatments.

Results: A trigger was identified in more than half of cases, including 8 influenza and 5 SARS-CoV-2 cases. All patients presented with acute kidney injury (AKI) (KDIGO stage 3 in 31 (84%) patients) while neurological (n=13, 36%) and cardiac damage (n=7, 19%) were less frequent. ADAMTS13 and complement activity were normal (n= 28 and 18 patients tested) and no pathogenic variant in the alternative complement pathway was found in 7 patients tested.TMA resolved in most (n=34, 94%) patients but 12 (44%) still displayed stage 3 AKI at discharge. Nineteen (51%) patients were treated with therapeutic plasma exchange, 14 (38%) patients received corticosteroids and 18 (50%) were treated with eculizumab. However none of these treatments demonstrated a significant impact on outcomes.

Conclusion: This study is the largest case series of CFZ-TMA since its approval in 2012. Patients present with severe AKI and experience frequent sequelae. Complement variants and blockade therapy do not seem to play a role in the pathophysiology and prognosis of the disease.

Keywords: carfilzomib; complement; eculizumab; myeloma thrombotic microangiopathy.