
Hepatitis B infection reported with cancer chemotherapy: analyzing the US FDA Adverse Event Reporting System
Author(s) -
Sanagawa Akimasa,
Hotta Yuji,
Kataoka Tomoya,
Maeda Yasuhiro,
Kondo Masahiro,
Kawade Yoshihiro,
Ogawa Yoshihiro,
Nishikawa Ryohei,
Tohkin Masahiro,
Kimura Kazunori
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
cancer medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.403
H-Index - 53
ISSN - 2045-7634
DOI - 10.1002/cam4.1429
Subject(s) - medicine , adverse event reporting system , hepatitis b , hepatitis c , adverse effect , oncology , hepatitis b virus , pharmacology , immunology , virus
We conducted data mining using the US Food and Drug Administration ( FDA ) Adverse Event Reporting System ( FAERS ) database on spontaneously reported adverse events to evaluate the association between anticancer drug therapy and hepatitis B infection. Reports of hepatitis B infection were retrieved from the FAERS database. The reporting odds ratio ( ROR ) was used to estimate the association between hepatitis B infection and various anticancer agents and drug combinations. We detected statistically significant risk signals of hepatitis B for 33 of 64 anticancer agents by ROR (26 cytotoxicity drugs and seven molecular‐targeted drugs). We focused on molecular‐targeted drugs and assessed the risk of hepatitis B from specific anticancer drug combinations. The frequency of hepatitis B infection was significantly high for drugs such as rituximab, bortezomib, imatinib, and everolimus. The addition of cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, and fludarabine to drug combinations additively enhanced the frequency of hepatitis B infection. There were no reports on hepatitis B infection associated with trastuzumab or azacitidine monotherapy. However, trastuzumab‐containing regimens (e.g., combinations with docetaxel or paclitaxel) were correlated with the incidence of hepatitis B infection, similar to azacitidine monotherapy. Our findings suggest that the concomitant use of anticancer drugs, such as trastuzumab, taxane, and azacitidine, may contribute to the risk of hepatitis B infection. The unique signals detected from the public database might provide clues to eliminate the threat of HBV in oncology.