Acute myeloid leukemia patient with active disseminated tuberculosis bridged to transplant with reduced 14-day venetoclax and azacitidine schedule
Theresa Lentner, G. Krajnik
memo - Magazine of European Medical Oncology · 2024-01
Abstract
Summary A 59-year-old female patient was diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia and tuberculosis. As a further complication, she developed idiopathic bowel perforation. Her infectious and intestinal situation demanded shorter periods of neutropenia and did not permit a high-dose, curative therapy regimen. Moreover, simultaneous administration of venetoclax and antitubercular therapy with rifampicin causes CYP3A4 interactions and thereby higher levels of toxicity. She was treated with a shortened, 14-day therapy regimen with azacitidine and venetoclax as antileukemic treatment together with ethambutol, pyrazinamide, isoniazid, and rifampicin as antitubercular therapy, which resulted in a complete remission and to an improvement of the tuberculosis without any greater toxicity or other adverse events.
MeSH terms
- Medicine
- Azacitidine
- Venetoclax
- Regimen
- Myeloid leukemia
- Ethambutol
- Pyrazinamide
- Febrile neutropenia
- Internal medicine
- Adverse effect
- Decitabine
- Oncology
- Rifabutin
- Tuberculosis
- Neutropenia
- Gastroenterology
- Leukemia
- Rifampicin
- Chemotherapy