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Increased interdigitation zone visibility on optical coherence tomography following systemic fibroblast growth factor receptor 1‐3 tyrosine kinase inhibitor anticancer therapy
Author(s) -
Charng Jason,
Attia Mary S.,
Arunachalam Sukanya,
Lam WeiSen,
Creaney Jenette,
Muruganandan Sanjeevan,
Read Catherine,
Millward Michael,
Spiro Jon,
Chakera Aron,
Lee Y. C. Gary,
Nowak Anna K.,
Chen Fred K.
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
clinical and experimental ophthalmology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.3
H-Index - 74
eISSN - 1442-9071
pISSN - 1442-6404
DOI - 10.1111/ceo.13940
Subject(s) - medicine , retinal , ophthalmology , visual acuity , optical coherence tomography , adverse effect
Abstract Background To describe ocular adverse events and retinal changes during fibroblast growth factor receptor (FGFR) inhibitor (AZD4547) anticancer therapy. Methods This is a sub‐study examining ocular adverse effects from AZD4547 therapy (single‐centre, open‐label, single arm phase II clinical trial). Comprehensive ocular examinations were performed 3 weekly in 24 patients. Macular optical coherence tomography (OCT) scan (30 0 × 25 0 ) was obtained at each visit and OCT parameters [central 1 mm retinal thickness (CRT) and total macular volume in central 6 mm] extracted. OCT scans were subdivided into outer (ELM to RPE) and inner (ELM to ILM) layers to compare outer and inner retinal changes. Results In 24 patients, AZD4547 was associated with eyelash elongation ( n = 5, 21%) and punctate corneal erosion ( n = 2, 8%). One patient developed clinically significant posterior capsular opacification during the study. OCT data were available in 23 patients, retinal changes ranged from an asymptomatic increased visibility of the interdigitation zone (IDZ) ( n = 10, 43%) to multilobular subretinal fluid pockets ( n = 5, 22%), which was associated with mild visual acuity loss. In a subset of patients ( n = 9) with pre‐AZD4547 dosing OCT baseline, CRT increased by mean ( SD ) of 9 (4) μm in those with IDZ change only compared with 64 (38) μm in those with other retinal changes. Retinal changes tended to be bilateral, self‐limiting and improved over time without medical intervention. Conclusions The ocular signs and symptoms did not result in dose cessation. Posteriorly, FGFR inhibition leads to outer retinal changes ranging from increased visibility of IDZ to distinct, multiple fluid pockets.