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I was diagnosed in May 2008, and in the last few months thought I might be

experiencing depression.  Taking a good look at myself, I really have noticed

that the fearfullness and tears I am experiencing are related to hormones and my

menstrual period.  I am 46, and after consulting with my oncologist and

gynecologist, am being put on hormones.  I sure hope this helps! Seeing stories

like " goshDawnit " make me so sad and scare the heck out of me! She was so brave,

and I can't imagine going through everything she went through.  My heart goes

out to her family and friends.

It sure helps me to come to this site and see what everyone else is

experiencing. My side effects of Gleevec are minimal, but every now and then I

have a small red rash on my cheeks, experience loose stools and diarrhea, and

have an upset stomach even when I take the Gleevec with my dinner. I have found

that since taking an iron supplement, my diarrhea is rare.  I feel cold at

times, get " shaky " legs, puffy eyes, and red veins in my eyes that disappear in

a couple of days. My eyes usually look tired in any picture I take.

I'm thankful every day that the Gleevec is helping me, and appreciate the here

and now.  I can't dwell on the " what ifs " or borrow fear and worry from the

future and as another person posted earlier, we could all die in a car crash

instead of from CML.

________________________________

From: suehurt28 <hollie@...>

Sent: Tuesday, January 27, 2009 12:24:09 AM

Subject: [ ] Depression ? caused by medication ? Jan 2009

Good Afternoon

If anyone has had a sudden or slow build up of depression since

diagnosed of CML and then it would also be that you commenced your

CML medication at the same time.

Has anyone considered the condition maybe contributed by your

medication.

It is only something that your specialist can evaluate - however

it is food for thought.

What is your experience ?

An abstract from Medscape that maybe of interest to you all

discussing this very topic.

Sue

____________ _________ _________ _________ _________ _________ _

Case Histories of Severe Depression With Imatinib and Dasatinib

Nick Mulcahy

January 16, 2009

— Seven patients receiving the tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs)

imatinib (Gleevec, Novartis) or dasatinib (Sprycel, Bristol-Myers

Squibb) have experienced severe and treatment-related depression,

according to clinicians from the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, whose

letter on the subject was published in the January 10 issue of the

Journal of Clinical Oncology.

The correspondence calls for routine screening for suicide ideation

and depressive symptoms in all patients being treated with the small-

molecule TKIs imatinib and dasatinib. The Dana-Farber clinicians also

call for dose-reduction and, if necessary, treatment discontinuation

as strategies to alleviate the depression.

TKIs have a " tolerable adverse-effect profile " that includes fluid

retention, diarrhea, cramps, and fatigue, note the authors, one of

whom, D. Block, MD, is chair of the department of psychosocial

oncology and palliative care at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, in

Boston, Massachusetts.

Dr. Block and her colleagues called TKI-associated depression " an

under-recognized small-molecule TKI effect. "

In an interview with Medscape Oncology, Dr. Block suggested that

clinicians may not have noticed depression in other TKI-treated

patients. " We know that diagnoses of depression are missed by

nonpsychiatric physicians the majority of the time, " she said.

A " striking pattern " exists in this series of 7 patients. " All were

coping well with their disease psychologically before

imatinib/dasatinib therapy, yet developed profound depression during

treatment, with many experiencing complete remission or improvement

of symptoms after dose reduction or drug discontinuation, " write the

authors of the letter.

TKI-associated depression was only noticed among patients taking

imatinib or dasatinib. However, " it is not inconceivable that similar

adverse effects may be seen with other TKIs, " write the authors. TKIs

share common mechanisms of action and have overlapping molecular

targets.

A spokesperson for Bristol-Myers Squibb, the makers of dasatinib,

also noted that the depression is not specific to 1 drug. " As the

letter points out, psychiatric disorders, including insomnia and

depression, are not specific to any one therapy and are manageable.

[Chronic myeloid leukemia] is a life-threatening disease and

treatments such as [dasatinib] have led to significant positive

advances for patients, " said Henry of Bristol-Myers Squibb in a

communication to Medscape Oncology.

Novartis, the makers of imatinib, did not respond to Medscape

Oncology about the letter and case reports of depression.

Imatinib is indicated for chronic myeloid leukemia and

gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GIST), and dasatinib is also

indicated for chronic myeloid leukemia, but in patients with

resistance or intolerance to previous therapy, including imatinib.

Both drugs are also indicated for use in patients Philadelphia

chromosome-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia.

Imatinib and dasatinib are widely considered to have revolutionized

the treatment of both GIST and chronic myeloid leukemia.

Inconsistent Response to Depression Treatment

TKI-associated psychiatric symptoms responded inconsistently to

standard antidepressant treatment; according to the authors. " Most

cancer-related depressions are relatively responsive to low-dose

antidepressant medications and psychotherapy, and these TKI-related

depressions are not, " said Dr. Block.

Only a small minority of patients with cancer develops depression

related to their illness, she added. The depressions seen in this

series of patients was not disease-related, according Dr. Block.

" The treatment-associate d depression we saw with the TKIs occurred in

temporal relationship to starting and stopping the drug, in patients

without a prior history or family history of depression, was less

responsive to treatment than usual depressions, and was unusually

severe, " she summarized.

In the event of TKI-associated depression, dose reduction may benefit

some patients. In severe treatment-refractor y cases, discontinuation

of the suspect TKI should be considered, say authors of the letter.

The authors emphasized the importance of close and careful monitoring

of depression and suicide ideation. " Given the known elevated risk of

suicide in cancer patients, suicidal ideation should be treated as a

psychiatric emergency, with immediate referral to a psychiatrist for

assessment, " they write.

Prescribing Information Lists Depression as Adverse Effect

The prescribing information for both imatinib and dasatinib lists

depression as an adverse event. However, depression is not

highlighted with a warning or precaution/caution for either drug.

In a clinical trial of imatinib among newly diagnosed chronic myeloid

leukemia patients, depression (all grades) occurred in 14.9% of

patients, and grade 3/4 depression occurred in 0.5% of patients. In a

trial of adjuvant imatinib among GIST patients, depression (all

grades) occurred in 6.8% of patients and grade 3/4 depression

occurred in 0.9% of patients.

In the dasatinib prescribing information, depression is listed as

occurring in 1% to more than 10% of patients; no mention is made of

the depression grade.

Sample Story

The letter from the Dana-Farber clinicians details the 7 cases of

depression seen in their clinics, including the following abridged

version of 1 of the case reports.

A 55-year-old male with GIST, diagnosed in January 2000, underwent

complete resection, but the disease recurred in March 2001. He

was " coping well " with his metastatic cancer diagnosis, worked full

time, and ran 4 miles daily.

Within 5 months of being prescribed 800 mg/day of imatinib, the

patient developed new severe depression. He experienced decreased

libido, diminished attention span, disorganization of thoughts, and

intense feelings of hopelessness, helplessness, and demotivation. He

began to struggle in his corporate leadership role. Symptoms proved

refractory to standard therapy for depression. The imatinib dose was

reduced to 400 mg/day. The patient then reported an increase in

energy level with alleviation of depressed affect, which was

sustained for about 1 year.

Then, he again reported worsening depression, became periodically

tearful, and was unable to function at work. Eventually, imatinib

treatment was discontinued and he experienced prompt resolution of

depression.

Over the course of this man's illness, he had been challenged 5 times

with high-dose imatinib (600 to 800 mg/day), write the letter

authors. Each time, imatinib therapy precipitated depression. In

every instance but one, depressive symptoms diminished or resolved

completely with dose interruption.

Dr. Block has disclosed no relevant financial relationships. Those of

her coauthors are listed at the end of the published correspondence.

J Clin Oncol. 2009;27:312- 313. Abstract

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I have had mild to severe depression ever since starting on Gleevec ( Apr. 2008)

It just to be getting worse. I seem to have a head full of water...(tears) most

days.

Eva

From: suehurt28

Sent: Tuesday, January 27, 2009 3:24 AM

Subject: [ ] Depression ? caused by medication ? Jan 2009

Good Afternoon

If anyone has had a sudden or slow build up of depression since

diagnosed of CML and then it would also be that you commenced your

CML medication at the same time.

Has anyone considered the condition maybe contributed by your

medication.

It is only something that your specialist can evaluate - however

it is food for thought.

What is your experience ?

An abstract from Medscape that maybe of interest to you all

discussing this very topic.

Sue

__________________________________________________________

Case Histories of Severe Depression With Imatinib and Dasatinib

Nick Mulcahy

January 16, 2009

- Seven patients receiving the tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs)

imatinib (Gleevec, Novartis) or dasatinib (Sprycel, Bristol-Myers

Squibb) have experienced severe and treatment-related depression,

according to clinicians from the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, whose

letter on the subject was published in the January 10 issue of the

Journal of Clinical Oncology.

The correspondence calls for routine screening for suicide ideation

and depressive symptoms in all patients being treated with the small-

molecule TKIs imatinib and dasatinib. The Dana-Farber clinicians also

call for dose-reduction and, if necessary, treatment discontinuation

as strategies to alleviate the depression.

TKIs have a " tolerable adverse-effect profile " that includes fluid

retention, diarrhea, cramps, and fatigue, note the authors, one of

whom, D. Block, MD, is chair of the department of psychosocial

oncology and palliative care at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, in

Boston, Massachusetts.

Dr. Block and her colleagues called TKI-associated depression " an

under-recognized small-molecule TKI effect. "

In an interview with Medscape Oncology, Dr. Block suggested that

clinicians may not have noticed depression in other TKI-treated

patients. " We know that diagnoses of depression are missed by

nonpsychiatric physicians the majority of the time, " she said.

A " striking pattern " exists in this series of 7 patients. " All were

coping well with their disease psychologically before

imatinib/dasatinib therapy, yet developed profound depression during

treatment, with many experiencing complete remission or improvement

of symptoms after dose reduction or drug discontinuation, " write the

authors of the letter.

TKI-associated depression was only noticed among patients taking

imatinib or dasatinib. However, " it is not inconceivable that similar

adverse effects may be seen with other TKIs, " write the authors. TKIs

share common mechanisms of action and have overlapping molecular

targets.

A spokesperson for Bristol-Myers Squibb, the makers of dasatinib,

also noted that the depression is not specific to 1 drug. " As the

letter points out, psychiatric disorders, including insomnia and

depression, are not specific to any one therapy and are manageable.

[Chronic myeloid leukemia] is a life-threatening disease and

treatments such as [dasatinib] have led to significant positive

advances for patients, " said Henry of Bristol-Myers Squibb in a

communication to Medscape Oncology.

Novartis, the makers of imatinib, did not respond to Medscape

Oncology about the letter and case reports of depression.

Imatinib is indicated for chronic myeloid leukemia and

gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GIST), and dasatinib is also

indicated for chronic myeloid leukemia, but in patients with

resistance or intolerance to previous therapy, including imatinib.

Both drugs are also indicated for use in patients Philadelphia

chromosome-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia.

Imatinib and dasatinib are widely considered to have revolutionized

the treatment of both GIST and chronic myeloid leukemia.

Inconsistent Response to Depression Treatment

TKI-associated psychiatric symptoms responded inconsistently to

standard antidepressant treatment; according to the authors. " Most

cancer-related depressions are relatively responsive to low-dose

antidepressant medications and psychotherapy, and these TKI-related

depressions are not, " said Dr. Block.

Only a small minority of patients with cancer develops depression

related to their illness, she added. The depressions seen in this

series of patients was not disease-related, according Dr. Block.

" The treatment-associated depression we saw with the TKIs occurred in

temporal relationship to starting and stopping the drug, in patients

without a prior history or family history of depression, was less

responsive to treatment than usual depressions, and was unusually

severe, " she summarized.

In the event of TKI-associated depression, dose reduction may benefit

some patients. In severe treatment-refractory cases, discontinuation

of the suspect TKI should be considered, say authors of the letter.

The authors emphasized the importance of close and careful monitoring

of depression and suicide ideation. " Given the known elevated risk of

suicide in cancer patients, suicidal ideation should be treated as a

psychiatric emergency, with immediate referral to a psychiatrist for

assessment, " they write.

Prescribing Information Lists Depression as Adverse Effect

The prescribing information for both imatinib and dasatinib lists

depression as an adverse event. However, depression is not

highlighted with a warning or precaution/caution for either drug.

In a clinical trial of imatinib among newly diagnosed chronic myeloid

leukemia patients, depression (all grades) occurred in 14.9% of

patients, and grade 3/4 depression occurred in 0.5% of patients. In a

trial of adjuvant imatinib among GIST patients, depression (all

grades) occurred in 6.8% of patients and grade 3/4 depression

occurred in 0.9% of patients.

In the dasatinib prescribing information, depression is listed as

occurring in 1% to more than 10% of patients; no mention is made of

the depression grade.

Sample Story

The letter from the Dana-Farber clinicians details the 7 cases of

depression seen in their clinics, including the following abridged

version of 1 of the case reports.

A 55-year-old male with GIST, diagnosed in January 2000, underwent

complete resection, but the disease recurred in March 2001. He

was " coping well " with his metastatic cancer diagnosis, worked full

time, and ran 4 miles daily.

Within 5 months of being prescribed 800 mg/day of imatinib, the

patient developed new severe depression. He experienced decreased

libido, diminished attention span, disorganization of thoughts, and

intense feelings of hopelessness, helplessness, and demotivation. He

began to struggle in his corporate leadership role. Symptoms proved

refractory to standard therapy for depression. The imatinib dose was

reduced to 400 mg/day. The patient then reported an increase in

energy level with alleviation of depressed affect, which was

sustained for about 1 year.

Then, he again reported worsening depression, became periodically

tearful, and was unable to function at work. Eventually, imatinib

treatment was discontinued and he experienced prompt resolution of

depression.

Over the course of this man's illness, he had been challenged 5 times

with high-dose imatinib (600 to 800 mg/day), write the letter

authors. Each time, imatinib therapy precipitated depression. In

every instance but one, depressive symptoms diminished or resolved

completely with dose interruption.

Dr. Block has disclosed no relevant financial relationships. Those of

her coauthors are listed at the end of the published correspondence.

J Clin Oncol. 2009;27:312-313. Abstract

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Eva The lack of light in the days gets me down ,of course you work where there

is light.I was given a drug vitamon D3 50,000iu.You only take it 2 times a week.

It helps where you do not get sun .It will be hard to find .I don,t know if it

helps next year I'm goning south .

________________________________

From: Eva <evaob365@...>

Sent: Tuesday, January 27, 2009 3:06:01 PM

Subject: Re: [ ] Depression ? caused by medication ? Jan 2009

I have had mild to severe depression ever since starting on Gleevec ( Apr. 2008)

It just to be getting worse. I seem to have a head full of water...(tears) most

days.

Eva

From: suehurt28

Sent: Tuesday, January 27, 2009 3:24 AM

groups (DOT) com

Subject: [ ] Depression ? caused by medication ? Jan 2009

Good Afternoon

If anyone has had a sudden or slow build up of depression since

diagnosed of CML and then it would also be that you commenced your

CML medication at the same time.

Has anyone considered the condition maybe contributed by your

medication.

It is only something that your specialist can evaluate - however

it is food for thought.

What is your experience ?

An abstract from Medscape that maybe of interest to you all

discussing this very topic.

Sue

____________ _________ _________ _________ _________ _________ _

Case Histories of Severe Depression With Imatinib and Dasatinib

Nick Mulcahy

January 16, 2009

- Seven patients receiving the tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs)

imatinib (Gleevec, Novartis) or dasatinib (Sprycel, Bristol-Myers

Squibb) have experienced severe and treatment-related depression,

according to clinicians from the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, whose

letter on the subject was published in the January 10 issue of the

Journal of Clinical Oncology.

The correspondence calls for routine screening for suicide ideation

and depressive symptoms in all patients being treated with the small-

molecule TKIs imatinib and dasatinib. The Dana-Farber clinicians also

call for dose-reduction and, if necessary, treatment discontinuation

as strategies to alleviate the depression.

TKIs have a " tolerable adverse-effect profile " that includes fluid

retention, diarrhea, cramps, and fatigue, note the authors, one of

whom, D. Block, MD, is chair of the department of psychosocial

oncology and palliative care at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, in

Boston, Massachusetts.

Dr. Block and her colleagues called TKI-associated depression " an

under-recognized small-molecule TKI effect. "

In an interview with Medscape Oncology, Dr. Block suggested that

clinicians may not have noticed depression in other TKI-treated

patients. " We know that diagnoses of depression are missed by

nonpsychiatric physicians the majority of the time, " she said.

A " striking pattern " exists in this series of 7 patients. " All were

coping well with their disease psychologically before

imatinib/dasatinib therapy, yet developed profound depression during

treatment, with many experiencing complete remission or improvement

of symptoms after dose reduction or drug discontinuation, " write the

authors of the letter.

TKI-associated depression was only noticed among patients taking

imatinib or dasatinib. However, " it is not inconceivable that similar

adverse effects may be seen with other TKIs, " write the authors. TKIs

share common mechanisms of action and have overlapping molecular

targets.

A spokesperson for Bristol-Myers Squibb, the makers of dasatinib,

also noted that the depression is not specific to 1 drug. " As the

letter points out, psychiatric disorders, including insomnia and

depression, are not specific to any one therapy and are manageable.

[Chronic myeloid leukemia] is a life-threatening disease and

treatments such as [dasatinib] have led to significant positive

advances for patients, " said Henry of Bristol-Myers Squibb in a

communication to Medscape Oncology.

Novartis, the makers of imatinib, did not respond to Medscape

Oncology about the letter and case reports of depression.

Imatinib is indicated for chronic myeloid leukemia and

gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GIST), and dasatinib is also

indicated for chronic myeloid leukemia, but in patients with

resistance or intolerance to previous therapy, including imatinib.

Both drugs are also indicated for use in patients Philadelphia

chromosome-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia.

Imatinib and dasatinib are widely considered to have revolutionized

the treatment of both GIST and chronic myeloid leukemia.

Inconsistent Response to Depression Treatment

TKI-associated psychiatric symptoms responded inconsistently to

standard antidepressant treatment; according to the authors. " Most

cancer-related depressions are relatively responsive to low-dose

antidepressant medications and psychotherapy, and these TKI-related

depressions are not, " said Dr. Block.

Only a small minority of patients with cancer develops depression

related to their illness, she added. The depressions seen in this

series of patients was not disease-related, according Dr. Block.

" The treatment-associate d depression we saw with the TKIs occurred in

temporal relationship to starting and stopping the drug, in patients

without a prior history or family history of depression, was less

responsive to treatment than usual depressions, and was unusually

severe, " she summarized.

In the event of TKI-associated depression, dose reduction may benefit

some patients. In severe treatment-refractor y cases, discontinuation

of the suspect TKI should be considered, say authors of the letter.

The authors emphasized the importance of close and careful monitoring

of depression and suicide ideation. " Given the known elevated risk of

suicide in cancer patients, suicidal ideation should be treated as a

psychiatric emergency, with immediate referral to a psychiatrist for

assessment, " they write.

Prescribing Information Lists Depression as Adverse Effect

The prescribing information for both imatinib and dasatinib lists

depression as an adverse event. However, depression is not

highlighted with a warning or precaution/caution for either drug.

In a clinical trial of imatinib among newly diagnosed chronic myeloid

leukemia patients, depression (all grades) occurred in 14.9% of

patients, and grade 3/4 depression occurred in 0.5% of patients. In a

trial of adjuvant imatinib among GIST patients, depression (all

grades) occurred in 6.8% of patients and grade 3/4 depression

occurred in 0.9% of patients.

In the dasatinib prescribing information, depression is listed as

occurring in 1% to more than 10% of patients; no mention is made of

the depression grade.

Sample Story

The letter from the Dana-Farber clinicians details the 7 cases of

depression seen in their clinics, including the following abridged

version of 1 of the case reports.

A 55-year-old male with GIST, diagnosed in January 2000, underwent

complete resection, but the disease recurred in March 2001. He

was " coping well " with his metastatic cancer diagnosis, worked full

time, and ran 4 miles daily.

Within 5 months of being prescribed 800 mg/day of imatinib, the

patient developed new severe depression. He experienced decreased

libido, diminished attention span, disorganization of thoughts, and

intense feelings of hopelessness, helplessness, and demotivation. He

began to struggle in his corporate leadership role. Symptoms proved

refractory to standard therapy for depression. The imatinib dose was

reduced to 400 mg/day. The patient then reported an increase in

energy level with alleviation of depressed affect, which was

sustained for about 1 year.

Then, he again reported worsening depression, became periodically

tearful, and was unable to function at work. Eventually, imatinib

treatment was discontinued and he experienced prompt resolution of

depression.

Over the course of this man's illness, he had been challenged 5 times

with high-dose imatinib (600 to 800 mg/day), write the letter

authors. Each time, imatinib therapy precipitated depression. In

every instance but one, depressive symptoms diminished or resolved

completely with dose interruption.

Dr. Block has disclosed no relevant financial relationships. Those of

her coauthors are listed at the end of the published correspondence.

J Clin Oncol. 2009;27:312- 313. Abstract

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi, Eva. Are you taking anything besides Gleevec? After taking Gleevec for about

a year, I developed a kind of spastic tremor in my right hand and right foot. A

neurologist prescribed Neurontin, which eliminated the tremor, but may have left

depression in its stead. I, too, have been experiencing a terrible despair over

the past several months. It visits just like clockwork every day from early to

late afternoon. My regular doc said the regularity with which it occurred

suggested to her that it was meds-related, most likely the Neurontin. She

suggested I cut the dose in half. It has helped HUGELY. I looked up Neurontin on

WorstPills.org (dr. Sidney Wolfe) and learned that Neurontin has been linked to

depression and suicidal feelings!

In addition, I started taking Vit. D supplements and I get out and take a walk

mid-morning when the sun's out.

From: evaob365@...

Date: Tue, 27 Jan 2009 16:06:01 -0500

Subject: Re: [ ] Depression ? caused by medication ? Jan 2009

I have had mild to severe depression ever since starting on Gleevec

( Apr. 2008) It just to be getting worse. I seem to have a head full of

water...(tears) most days.

Eva

From: suehurt28

Sent: Tuesday, January 27, 2009 3:24 AM

Subject: [ ] Depression ? caused by medication ? Jan 2009

Good Afternoon

If anyone has had a sudden or slow build up of depression since

diagnosed of CML and then it would also be that you commenced your

CML medication at the same time.

Has anyone considered the condition maybe contributed by your

medication.

It is only something that your specialist can evaluate - however

it is food for thought.

What is your experience ?

An abstract from Medscape that maybe of interest to you all

discussing this very topic.

Sue

__________________________________________________________

Case Histories of Severe Depression With Imatinib and Dasatinib

Nick Mulcahy

January 16, 2009

- Seven patients receiving the tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs)

imatinib (Gleevec, Novartis) or dasatinib (Sprycel, Bristol-Myers

Squibb) have experienced severe and treatment-related depression,

according to clinicians from the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, whose

letter on the subject was published in the January 10 issue of the

Journal of Clinical Oncology.

The correspondence calls for routine screening for suicide ideation

and depressive symptoms in all patients being treated with the small-

molecule TKIs imatinib and dasatinib. The Dana-Farber clinicians also

call for dose-reduction and, if necessary, treatment discontinuation

as strategies to alleviate the depression.

TKIs have a " tolerable adverse-effect profile " that includes fluid

retention, diarrhea, cramps, and fatigue, note the authors, one of

whom, D. Block, MD, is chair of the department of psychosocial

oncology and palliative care at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, in

Boston, Massachusetts.

Dr. Block and her colleagues called TKI-associated depression " an

under-recognized small-molecule TKI effect. "

In an interview with Medscape Oncology, Dr. Block suggested that

clinicians may not have noticed depression in other TKI-treated

patients. " We know that diagnoses of depression are missed by

nonpsychiatric physicians the majority of the time, " she said.

A " striking pattern " exists in this series of 7 patients. " All were

coping well with their disease psychologically before

imatinib/dasatinib therapy, yet developed profound depression during

treatment, with many experiencing complete remission or improvement

of symptoms after dose reduction or drug discontinuation, " write the

authors of the letter.

TKI-associated depression was only noticed among patients taking

imatinib or dasatinib. However, " it is not inconceivable that similar

adverse effects may be seen with other TKIs, " write the authors. TKIs

share common mechanisms of action and have overlapping molecular

targets.

A spokesperson for Bristol-Myers Squibb, the makers of dasatinib,

also noted that the depression is not specific to 1 drug. " As the

letter points out, psychiatric disorders, including insomnia and

depression, are not specific to any one therapy and are manageable.

[Chronic myeloid leukemia] is a life-threatening disease and

treatments such as [dasatinib] have led to significant positive

advances for patients, " said Henry of Bristol-Myers Squibb in a

communication to Medscape Oncology.

Novartis, the makers of imatinib, did not respond to Medscape

Oncology about the letter and case reports of depression.

Imatinib is indicated for chronic myeloid leukemia and

gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GIST), and dasatinib is also

indicated for chronic myeloid leukemia, but in patients with

resistance or intolerance to previous therapy, including imatinib.

Both drugs are also indicated for use in patients Philadelphia

chromosome-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia.

Imatinib and dasatinib are widely considered to have revolutionized

the treatment of both GIST and chronic myeloid leukemia.

Inconsistent Response to Depression Treatment

TKI-associated psychiatric symptoms responded inconsistently to

standard antidepressant treatment; according to the authors. " Most

cancer-related depressions are relatively responsive to low-dose

antidepressant medications and psychotherapy, and these TKI-related

depressions are not, " said Dr. Block.

Only a small minority of patients with cancer develops depression

related to their illness, she added. The depressions seen in this

series of patients was not disease-related, according Dr. Block.

" The treatment-associated depression we saw with the TKIs occurred in

temporal relationship to starting and stopping the drug, in patients

without a prior history or family history of depression, was less

responsive to treatment than usual depressions, and was unusually

severe, " she summarized.

In the event of TKI-associated depression, dose reduction may benefit

some patients. In severe treatment-refractory cases, discontinuation

of the suspect TKI should be considered, say authors of the letter.

The authors emphasized the importance of close and careful monitoring

of depression and suicide ideation. " Given the known elevated risk of

suicide in cancer patients, suicidal ideation should be treated as a

psychiatric emergency, with immediate referral to a psychiatrist for

assessment, " they write.

Prescribing Information Lists Depression as Adverse Effect

The prescribing information for both imatinib and dasatinib lists

depression as an adverse event. However, depression is not

highlighted with a warning or precaution/caution for either drug.

In a clinical trial of imatinib among newly diagnosed chronic myeloid

leukemia patients, depression (all grades) occurred in 14.9% of

patients, and grade 3/4 depression occurred in 0.5% of patients. In a

trial of adjuvant imatinib among GIST patients, depression (all

grades) occurred in 6.8% of patients and grade 3/4 depression

occurred in 0.9% of patients.

In the dasatinib prescribing information, depression is listed as

occurring in 1% to more than 10% of patients; no mention is made of

the depression grade.

Sample Story

The letter from the Dana-Farber clinicians details the 7 cases of

depression seen in their clinics, including the following abridged

version of 1 of the case reports.

A 55-year-old male with GIST, diagnosed in January 2000, underwent

complete resection, but the disease recurred in March 2001. He

was " coping well " with his metastatic cancer diagnosis, worked full

time, and ran 4 miles daily.

Within 5 months of being prescribed 800 mg/day of imatinib, the

patient developed new severe depression. He experienced decreased

libido, diminished attention span, disorganization of thoughts, and

intense feelings of hopelessness, helplessness, and demotivation. He

began to struggle in his corporate leadership role. Symptoms proved

refractory to standard therapy for depression. The imatinib dose was

reduced to 400 mg/day. The patient then reported an increase in

energy level with alleviation of depressed affect, which was

sustained for about 1 year.

Then, he again reported worsening depression, became periodically

tearful, and was unable to function at work. Eventually, imatinib

treatment was discontinued and he experienced prompt resolution of

depression.

Over the course of this man's illness, he had been challenged 5 times

with high-dose imatinib (600 to 800 mg/day), write the letter

authors. Each time, imatinib therapy precipitated depression. In

every instance but one, depressive symptoms diminished or resolved

completely with dose interruption.

Dr. Block has disclosed no relevant financial relationships. Those of

her coauthors are listed at the end of the published correspondence.

J Clin Oncol. 2009;27:312-313. Abstract

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi All --

I haven't written anything in a long time, but I have continued to appreciate

all of you and your caring incite. I am sorry I have not contributed more. I

passed my five year anniversary on Dec. 3rd '08 and am thankful for that.

What I also wanted to mention is that five years ago in about June, I became

very withdrawn and a bit surly and a doctor friend of mine wondered what was up.

Turns out that was right after the Leukemia had begun a few months earlier, from

what we know now. Anyway, at the time we though I was premenstrual/borderline

postal at times and so she prescribed some antidepressants since that has been

found to be a helpful thing for severe pms. I have been so grateful that when

the cml was found a few months later, I was already on a depression med, because

it helped me a great deal. I had such a negative attitude about taking an

antidepressant and the pms thing sort of gave me an out, if you will, given it

was not all out depression. Anyway, I don't know if this is true, but I really

think that as the cml set in I became more and more depress before I had started

the med in June. We of course didn't know that the cml was there, but now I do

and I would bet money I don't have that it set it off.

Just my two cents...

chris in minn

From: evaob365@...

Date: Tue, 27 Jan 2009 16:06:01 -0500

Subject: Re: [ ] Depression ? caused by medication ? Jan 2009

I have had mild to severe depression ever since starting on Gleevec

( Apr. 2008) It just to be getting worse. I seem to have a head full of

water...(tears) most days.

Eva

From: suehurt28

Sent: Tuesday, January 27, 2009 3:24 AM

Subject: [ ] Depression ? caused by medication ? Jan 2009

Good Afternoon

If anyone has had a sudden or slow build up of depression since

diagnosed of CML and then it would also be that you commenced your

CML medication at the same time.

Has anyone considered the condition maybe contributed by your

medication.

It is only something that your specialist can evaluate - however

it is food for thought.

What is your experience ?

An abstract from Medscape that maybe of interest to you all

discussing this very topic.

Sue

__________________________________________________________

Case Histories of Severe Depression With Imatinib and Dasatinib

Nick Mulcahy

January 16, 2009

- Seven patients receiving the tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs)

imatinib (Gleevec, Novartis) or dasatinib (Sprycel, Bristol-Myers

Squibb) have experienced severe and treatment-related depression,

according to clinicians from the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, whose

letter on the subject was published in the January 10 issue of the

Journal of Clinical Oncology.

The correspondence calls for routine screening for suicide ideation

and depressive symptoms in all patients being treated with the small-

molecule TKIs imatinib and dasatinib. The Dana-Farber clinicians also

call for dose-reduction and, if necessary, treatment discontinuation

as strategies to alleviate the depression.

TKIs have a " tolerable adverse-effect profile " that includes fluid

retention, diarrhea, cramps, and fatigue, note the authors, one of

whom, D. Block, MD, is chair of the department of psychosocial

oncology and palliative care at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, in

Boston, Massachusetts.

Dr. Block and her colleagues called TKI-associated depression " an

under-recognized small-molecule TKI effect. "

In an interview with Medscape Oncology, Dr. Block suggested that

clinicians may not have noticed depression in other TKI-treated

patients. " We know that diagnoses of depression are missed by

nonpsychiatric physicians the majority of the time, " she said.

A " striking pattern " exists in this series of 7 patients. " All were

coping well with their disease psychologically before

imatinib/dasatinib therapy, yet developed profound depression during

treatment, with many experiencing complete remission or improvement

of symptoms after dose reduction or drug discontinuation, " write the

authors of the letter.

TKI-associated depression was only noticed among patients taking

imatinib or dasatinib. However, " it is not inconceivable that similar

adverse effects may be seen with other TKIs, " write the authors. TKIs

share common mechanisms of action and have overlapping molecular

targets.

A spokesperson for Bristol-Myers Squibb, the makers of dasatinib,

also noted that the depression is not specific to 1 drug. " As the

letter points out, psychiatric disorders, including insomnia and

depression, are not specific to any one therapy and are manageable.

[Chronic myeloid leukemia] is a life-threatening disease and

treatments such as [dasatinib] have led to significant positive

advances for patients, " said Henry of Bristol-Myers Squibb in a

communication to Medscape Oncology.

Novartis, the makers of imatinib, did not respond to Medscape

Oncology about the letter and case reports of depression.

Imatinib is indicated for chronic myeloid leukemia and

gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GIST), and dasatinib is also

indicated for chronic myeloid leukemia, but in patients with

resistance or intolerance to previous therapy, including imatinib.

Both drugs are also indicated for use in patients Philadelphia

chromosome-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia.

Imatinib and dasatinib are widely considered to have revolutionized

the treatment of both GIST and chronic myeloid leukemia.

Inconsistent Response to Depression Treatment

TKI-associated psychiatric symptoms responded inconsistently to

standard antidepressant treatment; according to the authors. " Most

cancer-related depressions are relatively responsive to low-dose

antidepressant medications and psychotherapy, and these TKI-related

depressions are not, " said Dr. Block.

Only a small minority of patients with cancer develops depression

related to their illness, she added. The depressions seen in this

series of patients was not disease-related, according Dr. Block.

" The treatment-associated depression we saw with the TKIs occurred in

temporal relationship to starting and stopping the drug, in patients

without a prior history or family history of depression, was less

responsive to treatment than usual depressions, and was unusually

severe, " she summarized.

In the event of TKI-associated depression, dose reduction may benefit

some patients. In severe treatment-refractory cases, discontinuation

of the suspect TKI should be considered, say authors of the letter.

The authors emphasized the importance of close and careful monitoring

of depression and suicide ideation. " Given the known elevated risk of

suicide in cancer patients, suicidal ideation should be treated as a

psychiatric emergency, with immediate referral to a psychiatrist for

assessment, " they write.

Prescribing Information Lists Depression as Adverse Effect

The prescribing information for both imatinib and dasatinib lists

depression as an adverse event. However, depression is not

highlighted with a warning or precaution/caution for either drug.

In a clinical trial of imatinib among newly diagnosed chronic myeloid

leukemia patients, depression (all grades) occurred in 14.9% of

patients, and grade 3/4 depression occurred in 0.5% of patients. In a

trial of adjuvant imatinib among GIST patients, depression (all

grades) occurred in 6.8% of patients and grade 3/4 depression

occurred in 0.9% of patients.

In the dasatinib prescribing information, depression is listed as

occurring in 1% to more than 10% of patients; no mention is made of

the depression grade.

Sample Story

The letter from the Dana-Farber clinicians details the 7 cases of

depression seen in their clinics, including the following abridged

version of 1 of the case reports.

A 55-year-old male with GIST, diagnosed in January 2000, underwent

complete resection, but the disease recurred in March 2001. He

was " coping well " with his metastatic cancer diagnosis, worked full

time, and ran 4 miles daily.

Within 5 months of being prescribed 800 mg/day of imatinib, the

patient developed new severe depression. He experienced decreased

libido, diminished attention span, disorganization of thoughts, and

intense feelings of hopelessness, helplessness, and demotivation. He

began to struggle in his corporate leadership role. Symptoms proved

refractory to standard therapy for depression. The imatinib dose was

reduced to 400 mg/day. The patient then reported an increase in

energy level with alleviation of depressed affect, which was

sustained for about 1 year.

Then, he again reported worsening depression, became periodically

tearful, and was unable to function at work. Eventually, imatinib

treatment was discontinued and he experienced prompt resolution of

depression.

Over the course of this man's illness, he had been challenged 5 times

with high-dose imatinib (600 to 800 mg/day), write the letter

authors. Each time, imatinib therapy precipitated depression. In

every instance but one, depressive symptoms diminished or resolved

completely with dose interruption.

Dr. Block has disclosed no relevant financial relationships. Those of

her coauthors are listed at the end of the published correspondence.

J Clin Oncol. 2009;27:312-313. Abstract

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Well I am glad to know I am not the only one. I have been in and out of

depression since being dxed in 04. I stopped taking anti depressants because

none of them worked and i did not want to end up on a higher dosage and make

things worse. I think mine is part because I have CML, and unable to work.

Another is shortly after i was dxed my wife left so even though it has been

about 3 years since that happened I still have issues.

Terry

On Wed, Jan 28, 2009 at 9:36 AM, Finsand <chrisfinsand2@...>wrote:

>

> Hi All --

> I haven't written anything in a long time, but I have continued to

> appreciate all of you and your caring incite. I am sorry I have not

> contributed more. I passed my five year anniversary on Dec. 3rd '08 and am

> thankful for that.

> What I also wanted to mention is that five years ago in about June, I

> became very withdrawn and a bit surly and a doctor friend of mine wondered

> what was up. Turns out that was right after the Leukemia had begun a few

> months earlier, from what we know now. Anyway, at the time we though I was

> premenstrual/borderline postal at times and so she prescribed some

> antidepressants since that has been found to be a helpful thing for severe

> pms. I have been so grateful that when the cml was found a few months later,

> I was already on a depression med, because it helped me a great deal. I had

> such a negative attitude about taking an antidepressant and the pms thing

> sort of gave me an out, if you will, given it was not all out depression.

> Anyway, I don't know if this is true, but I really think that as the cml set

> in I became more and more depress before I had started the med in June. We

> of course didn't know that the cml was there, but now I do and I would bet

> money I don't have that it set it off.

> Just my two cents...

> chris in minn

>

> <%40>

> From: evaob365@... <evaob365%40hotmail.com>

> Date: Tue, 27 Jan 2009 16:06:01 -0500

> Subject: Re: [ ] Depression ? caused by medication ? Jan 2009

>

> I have had mild to severe depression ever since starting on Gleevec ( Apr.

> 2008) It just to be getting worse. I seem to have a head full of

> water...(tears) most days.

>

> Eva

>

> From: suehurt28

>

> Sent: Tuesday, January 27, 2009 3:24 AM

>

> <%40>

>

> Subject: [ ] Depression ? caused by medication ? Jan 2009

>

> Good Afternoon

>

> If anyone has had a sudden or slow build up of depression since

>

> diagnosed of CML and then it would also be that you commenced your

>

> CML medication at the same time.

>

> Has anyone considered the condition maybe contributed by your

>

> medication.

>

> It is only something that your specialist can evaluate - however

>

> it is food for thought.

>

> What is your experience ?

>

> An abstract from Medscape that maybe of interest to you all

>

> discussing this very topic.

>

> Sue

>

> __________________________________________________________

>

> Case Histories of Severe Depression With Imatinib and Dasatinib

>

> Nick Mulcahy

>

> January 16, 2009

>

> - Seven patients receiving the tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs)

>

> imatinib (Gleevec, Novartis) or dasatinib (Sprycel, Bristol-Myers

>

> Squibb) have experienced severe and treatment-related depression,

>

> according to clinicians from the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, whose

>

> letter on the subject was published in the January 10 issue of the

>

> Journal of Clinical Oncology.

>

> The correspondence calls for routine screening for suicide ideation

>

> and depressive symptoms in all patients being treated with the small-

>

> molecule TKIs imatinib and dasatinib. The Dana-Farber clinicians also

>

> call for dose-reduction and, if necessary, treatment discontinuation

>

> as strategies to alleviate the depression.

>

> TKIs have a " tolerable adverse-effect profile " that includes fluid

>

> retention, diarrhea, cramps, and fatigue, note the authors, one of

>

> whom, D. Block, MD, is chair of the department of psychosocial

>

> oncology and palliative care at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, in

>

> Boston, Massachusetts.

>

> Dr. Block and her colleagues called TKI-associated depression " an

>

> under-recognized small-molecule TKI effect. "

>

> In an interview with Medscape Oncology, Dr. Block suggested that

>

> clinicians may not have noticed depression in other TKI-treated

>

> patients. " We know that diagnoses of depression are missed by

>

> nonpsychiatric physicians the majority of the time, " she said.

>

> A " striking pattern " exists in this series of 7 patients. " All were

>

> coping well with their disease psychologically before

>

> imatinib/dasatinib therapy, yet developed profound depression during

>

> treatment, with many experiencing complete remission or improvement

>

> of symptoms after dose reduction or drug discontinuation, " write the

>

> authors of the letter.

>

> TKI-associated depression was only noticed among patients taking

>

> imatinib or dasatinib. However, " it is not inconceivable that similar

>

> adverse effects may be seen with other TKIs, " write the authors. TKIs

>

> share common mechanisms of action and have overlapping molecular

>

> targets.

>

> A spokesperson for Bristol-Myers Squibb, the makers of dasatinib,

>

> also noted that the depression is not specific to 1 drug. " As the

>

> letter points out, psychiatric disorders, including insomnia and

>

> depression, are not specific to any one therapy and are manageable.

>

> [Chronic myeloid leukemia] is a life-threatening disease and

>

> treatments such as [dasatinib] have led to significant positive

>

> advances for patients, " said Henry of Bristol-Myers Squibb in a

>

> communication to Medscape Oncology.

>

> Novartis, the makers of imatinib, did not respond to Medscape

>

> Oncology about the letter and case reports of depression.

>

> Imatinib is indicated for chronic myeloid leukemia and

>

> gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GIST), and dasatinib is also

>

> indicated for chronic myeloid leukemia, but in patients with

>

> resistance or intolerance to previous therapy, including imatinib.

>

> Both drugs are also indicated for use in patients Philadelphia

>

> chromosome-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia.

>

> Imatinib and dasatinib are widely considered to have revolutionized

>

> the treatment of both GIST and chronic myeloid leukemia.

>

> Inconsistent Response to Depression Treatment

>

> TKI-associated psychiatric symptoms responded inconsistently to

>

> standard antidepressant treatment; according to the authors. " Most

>

> cancer-related depressions are relatively responsive to low-dose

>

> antidepressant medications and psychotherapy, and these TKI-related

>

> depressions are not, " said Dr. Block.

>

> Only a small minority of patients with cancer develops depression

>

> related to their illness, she added. The depressions seen in this

>

> series of patients was not disease-related, according Dr. Block.

>

> " The treatment-associated depression we saw with the TKIs occurred in

>

> temporal relationship to starting and stopping the drug, in patients

>

> without a prior history or family history of depression, was less

>

> responsive to treatment than usual depressions, and was unusually

>

> severe, " she summarized.

>

> In the event of TKI-associated depression, dose reduction may benefit

>

> some patients. In severe treatment-refractory cases, discontinuation

>

> of the suspect TKI should be considered, say authors of the letter.

>

> The authors emphasized the importance of close and careful monitoring

>

> of depression and suicide ideation. " Given the known elevated risk of

>

> suicide in cancer patients, suicidal ideation should be treated as a

>

> psychiatric emergency, with immediate referral to a psychiatrist for

>

> assessment, " they write.

>

> Prescribing Information Lists Depression as Adverse Effect

>

> The prescribing information for both imatinib and dasatinib lists

>

> depression as an adverse event. However, depression is not

>

> highlighted with a warning or precaution/caution for either drug.

>

> In a clinical trial of imatinib among newly diagnosed chronic myeloid

>

> leukemia patients, depression (all grades) occurred in 14.9% of

>

> patients, and grade 3/4 depression occurred in 0.5% of patients. In a

>

> trial of adjuvant imatinib among GIST patients, depression (all

>

> grades) occurred in 6.8% of patients and grade 3/4 depression

>

> occurred in 0.9% of patients.

>

> In the dasatinib prescribing information, depression is listed as

>

> occurring in 1% to more than 10% of patients; no mention is made of

>

> the depression grade.

>

> Sample Story

>

> The letter from the Dana-Farber clinicians details the 7 cases of

>

> depression seen in their clinics, including the following abridged

>

> version of 1 of the case reports.

>

> A 55-year-old male with GIST, diagnosed in January 2000, underwent

>

> complete resection, but the disease recurred in March 2001. He

>

> was " coping well " with his metastatic cancer diagnosis, worked full

>

> time, and ran 4 miles daily.

>

> Within 5 months of being prescribed 800 mg/day of imatinib, the

>

> patient developed new severe depression. He experienced decreased

>

> libido, diminished attention span, disorganization of thoughts, and

>

> intense feelings of hopelessness, helplessness, and demotivation. He

>

> began to struggle in his corporate leadership role. Symptoms proved

>

> refractory to standard therapy for depression. The imatinib dose was

>

> reduced to 400 mg/day. The patient then reported an increase in

>

> energy level with alleviation of depressed affect, which was

>

> sustained for about 1 year.

>

> Then, he again reported worsening depression, became periodically

>

> tearful, and was unable to function at work. Eventually, imatinib

>

> treatment was discontinued and he experienced prompt resolution of

>

> depression.

>

> Over the course of this man's illness, he had been challenged 5 times

>

> with high-dose imatinib (600 to 800 mg/day), write the letter

>

> authors. Each time, imatinib therapy precipitated depression. In

>

> every instance but one, depressive symptoms diminished or resolved

>

> completely with dose interruption.

>

> Dr. Block has disclosed no relevant financial relationships. Those of

>

> her coauthors are listed at the end of the published correspondence.

>

> J Clin Oncol. 2009;27:312-313. Abstract

>

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I take Vit " D " and half an antidepressant every night at bed time . I am usually

upbeat with a great sense of humor and I have become very depressed and bitter

and quite sullen sometimes. I don't know how my husband stands me . Good thing

he is a long haul trucker.

Next month will be my 1st cancerversary.But I am still Alive !!! Thanks Eva

From: Rosen Lum

Sent: Tuesday, January 27, 2009 7:46 PM

Subject: RE: [ ] Depression ? caused by medication ? Jan 2009

Hi, Eva. Are you taking anything besides Gleevec? After taking Gleevec for about

a year, I developed a kind of spastic tremor in my right hand and right foot. A

neurologist prescribed Neurontin, which eliminated the tremor, but may have left

depression in its stead. I, too, have been experiencing a terrible despair over

the past several months. It visits just like clockwork every day from early to

late afternoon. My regular doc said the regularity with which it occurred

suggested to her that it was meds-related, most likely the Neurontin. She

suggested I cut the dose in half. It has helped HUGELY. I looked up Neurontin on

WorstPills.org (dr. Sidney Wolfe) and learned that Neurontin has been linked to

depression and suicidal feelings!

In addition, I started taking Vit. D supplements and I get out and take a walk

mid-morning when the sun's out.

From: evaob365@...

Date: Tue, 27 Jan 2009 16:06:01 -0500

Subject: Re: [ ] Depression ? caused by medication ? Jan 2009

I have had mild to severe depression ever since starting on Gleevec ( Apr. 2008)

It just to be getting worse. I seem to have a head full of water...(tears) most

days.

Eva

From: suehurt28

Sent: Tuesday, January 27, 2009 3:24 AM

Subject: [ ] Depression ? caused by medication ? Jan 2009

Good Afternoon

If anyone has had a sudden or slow build up of depression since

diagnosed of CML and then it would also be that you commenced your

CML medication at the same time.

Has anyone considered the condition maybe contributed by your

medication.

It is only something that your specialist can evaluate - however

it is food for thought.

What is your experience ?

An abstract from Medscape that maybe of interest to you all

discussing this very topic.

Sue

__________________________________________________________

Case Histories of Severe Depression With Imatinib and Dasatinib

Nick Mulcahy

January 16, 2009

- Seven patients receiving the tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs)

imatinib (Gleevec, Novartis) or dasatinib (Sprycel, Bristol-Myers

Squibb) have experienced severe and treatment-related depression,

according to clinicians from the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, whose

letter on the subject was published in the January 10 issue of the

Journal of Clinical Oncology.

The correspondence calls for routine screening for suicide ideation

and depressive symptoms in all patients being treated with the small-

molecule TKIs imatinib and dasatinib. The Dana-Farber clinicians also

call for dose-reduction and, if necessary, treatment discontinuation

as strategies to alleviate the depression.

TKIs have a " tolerable adverse-effect profile " that includes fluid

retention, diarrhea, cramps, and fatigue, note the authors, one of

whom, D. Block, MD, is chair of the department of psychosocial

oncology and palliative care at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, in

Boston, Massachusetts.

Dr. Block and her colleagues called TKI-associated depression " an

under-recognized small-molecule TKI effect. "

In an interview with Medscape Oncology, Dr. Block suggested that

clinicians may not have noticed depression in other TKI-treated

patients. " We know that diagnoses of depression are missed by

nonpsychiatric physicians the majority of the time, " she said.

A " striking pattern " exists in this series of 7 patients. " All were

coping well with their disease psychologically before

imatinib/dasatinib therapy, yet developed profound depression during

treatment, with many experiencing complete remission or improvement

of symptoms after dose reduction or drug discontinuation, " write the

authors of the letter.

TKI-associated depression was only noticed among patients taking

imatinib or dasatinib. However, " it is not inconceivable that similar

adverse effects may be seen with other TKIs, " write the authors. TKIs

share common mechanisms of action and have overlapping molecular

targets.

A spokesperson for Bristol-Myers Squibb, the makers of dasatinib,

also noted that the depression is not specific to 1 drug. " As the

letter points out, psychiatric disorders, including insomnia and

depression, are not specific to any one therapy and are manageable.

[Chronic myeloid leukemia] is a life-threatening disease and

treatments such as [dasatinib] have led to significant positive

advances for patients, " said Henry of Bristol-Myers Squibb in a

communication to Medscape Oncology.

Novartis, the makers of imatinib, did not respond to Medscape

Oncology about the letter and case reports of depression.

Imatinib is indicated for chronic myeloid leukemia and

gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GIST), and dasatinib is also

indicated for chronic myeloid leukemia, but in patients with

resistance or intolerance to previous therapy, including imatinib.

Both drugs are also indicated for use in patients Philadelphia

chromosome-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia.

Imatinib and dasatinib are widely considered to have revolutionized

the treatment of both GIST and chronic myeloid leukemia.

Inconsistent Response to Depression Treatment

TKI-associated psychiatric symptoms responded inconsistently to

standard antidepressant treatment; according to the authors. " Most

cancer-related depressions are relatively responsive to low-dose

antidepressant medications and psychotherapy, and these TKI-related

depressions are not, " said Dr. Block.

Only a small minority of patients with cancer develops depression

related to their illness, she added. The depressions seen in this

series of patients was not disease-related, according Dr. Block.

" The treatment-associated depression we saw with the TKIs occurred in

temporal relationship to starting and stopping the drug, in patients

without a prior history or family history of depression, was less

responsive to treatment than usual depressions, and was unusually

severe, " she summarized.

In the event of TKI-associated depression, dose reduction may benefit

some patients. In severe treatment-refractory cases, discontinuation

of the suspect TKI should be considered, say authors of the letter.

The authors emphasized the importance of close and careful monitoring

of depression and suicide ideation. " Given the known elevated risk of

suicide in cancer patients, suicidal ideation should be treated as a

psychiatric emergency, with immediate referral to a psychiatrist for

assessment, " they write.

Prescribing Information Lists Depression as Adverse Effect

The prescribing information for both imatinib and dasatinib lists

depression as an adverse event. However, depression is not

highlighted with a warning or precaution/caution for either drug.

In a clinical trial of imatinib among newly diagnosed chronic myeloid

leukemia patients, depression (all grades) occurred in 14.9% of

patients, and grade 3/4 depression occurred in 0.5% of patients. In a

trial of adjuvant imatinib among GIST patients, depression (all

grades) occurred in 6.8% of patients and grade 3/4 depression

occurred in 0.9% of patients.

In the dasatinib prescribing information, depression is listed as

occurring in 1% to more than 10% of patients; no mention is made of

the depression grade.

Sample Story

The letter from the Dana-Farber clinicians details the 7 cases of

depression seen in their clinics, including the following abridged

version of 1 of the case reports.

A 55-year-old male with GIST, diagnosed in January 2000, underwent

complete resection, but the disease recurred in March 2001. He

was " coping well " with his metastatic cancer diagnosis, worked full

time, and ran 4 miles daily.

Within 5 months of being prescribed 800 mg/day of imatinib, the

patient developed new severe depression. He experienced decreased

libido, diminished attention span, disorganization of thoughts, and

intense feelings of hopelessness, helplessness, and demotivation. He

began to struggle in his corporate leadership role. Symptoms proved

refractory to standard therapy for depression. The imatinib dose was

reduced to 400 mg/day. The patient then reported an increase in

energy level with alleviation of depressed affect, which was

sustained for about 1 year.

Then, he again reported worsening depression, became periodically

tearful, and was unable to function at work. Eventually, imatinib

treatment was discontinued and he experienced prompt resolution of

depression.

Over the course of this man's illness, he had been challenged 5 times

with high-dose imatinib (600 to 800 mg/day), write the letter

authors. Each time, imatinib therapy precipitated depression. In

every instance but one, depressive symptoms diminished or resolved

completely with dose interruption.

Dr. Block has disclosed no relevant financial relationships. Those of

her coauthors are listed at the end of the published correspondence.

J Clin Oncol. 2009;27:312-313. Abstract

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Dear Eva,

 

I have been on anti  depressants for a couple years  now.   It started a year

after my diagnosis. I found myself sitting in a chair curled up in a blanket

most days,  or laying on the couch. My stomach hurt constantly and I was very

disfunctional.  Tried to work, but it wasn't going well. After advice from my

social worker, I started Zoloft at a very low dose and continue with it today. 

I can relate to your bitterness - the sun is a great healer. A nurse from Mdacc

prescribed :) 20 minutes of it daily and it  helped so much.  It got me out of

house.

 

I hope you are feeling better.  Depression is just one more side effect of this

yuckky disease. 

 

God Bless,

Jackie  Schneider

dx 4/14/04

From: Eva <evaob365@...>

Subject: Re: [ ] Depression ? caused by medication ? Jan 2009

Date: Thursday, January 29, 2009, 7:57 PM

I take Vit " D " and half an antidepressant every night at bed time . I am usually

upbeat with a great sense of humor and I have become very depressed and bitter

and quite sullen sometimes. I don't know how my husband stands me . Good thing

he is a long haul trucker.

Next month will be my 1st cancerversary. But I am still Alive !!! Thanks Eva

From: Rosen Lum

Sent: Tuesday, January 27, 2009 7:46 PM

groups (DOT) com

Subject: RE: [ ] Depression ? caused by medication ? Jan 2009

Hi, Eva. Are you taking anything besides Gleevec? After taking Gleevec for about

a year, I developed a kind of spastic tremor in my right hand and right foot. A

neurologist prescribed Neurontin, which eliminated the tremor, but may have left

depression in its stead. I, too, have been experiencing a terrible despair over

the past several months. It visits just like clockwork every day from early to

late afternoon. My regular doc said the regularity with which it occurred

suggested to her that it was meds-related, most likely the Neurontin. She

suggested I cut the dose in half. It has helped HUGELY. I looked up Neurontin on

WorstPills.org (dr. Sidney Wolfe) and learned that Neurontin has been linked to

depression and suicidal feelings!

In addition, I started taking Vit. D supplements and I get out and take a walk

mid-morning when the sun's out.

groups (DOT) com

From: evaob365hotmail (DOT) com

Date: Tue, 27 Jan 2009 16:06:01 -0500

Subject: Re: [ ] Depression ? caused by medication ? Jan 2009

I have had mild to severe depression ever since starting on Gleevec ( Apr. 2008)

It just to be getting worse. I seem to have a head full of water...(tears) most

days.

Eva

From: suehurt28

Sent: Tuesday, January 27, 2009 3:24 AM

groups (DOT) com

Subject: [ ] Depression ? caused by medication ? Jan 2009

Good Afternoon

If anyone has had a sudden or slow build up of depression since

diagnosed of CML and then it would also be that you commenced your

CML medication at the same time.

Has anyone considered the condition maybe contributed by your

medication.

It is only something that your specialist can evaluate - however

it is food for thought.

What is your experience ?

An abstract from Medscape that maybe of interest to you all

discussing this very topic.

Sue

____________ _________ _________ _________ _________ _________ _

Case Histories of Severe Depression With Imatinib and Dasatinib

Nick Mulcahy

January 16, 2009

- Seven patients receiving the tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs)

imatinib (Gleevec, Novartis) or dasatinib (Sprycel, Bristol-Myers

Squibb) have experienced severe and treatment-related depression,

according to clinicians from the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, whose

letter on the subject was published in the January 10 issue of the

Journal of Clinical Oncology.

The correspondence calls for routine screening for suicide ideation

and depressive symptoms in all patients being treated with the small-

molecule TKIs imatinib and dasatinib. The Dana-Farber clinicians also

call for dose-reduction and, if necessary, treatment discontinuation

as strategies to alleviate the depression.

TKIs have a " tolerable adverse-effect profile " that includes fluid

retention, diarrhea, cramps, and fatigue, note the authors, one of

whom, D. Block, MD, is chair of the department of psychosocial

oncology and palliative care at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, in

Boston, Massachusetts.

Dr. Block and her colleagues called TKI-associated depression " an

under-recognized small-molecule TKI effect. "

In an interview with Medscape Oncology, Dr. Block suggested that

clinicians may not have noticed depression in other TKI-treated

patients. " We know that diagnoses of depression are missed by

nonpsychiatric physicians the majority of the time, " she said.

A " striking pattern " exists in this series of 7 patients. " All were

coping well with their disease psychologically before

imatinib/dasatinib therapy, yet developed profound depression during

treatment, with many experiencing complete remission or improvement

of symptoms after dose reduction or drug discontinuation, " write the

authors of the letter.

TKI-associated depression was only noticed among patients taking

imatinib or dasatinib. However, " it is not inconceivable that similar

adverse effects may be seen with other TKIs, " write the authors. TKIs

share common mechanisms of action and have overlapping molecular

targets.

A spokesperson for Bristol-Myers Squibb, the makers of dasatinib,

also noted that the depression is not specific to 1 drug. " As the

letter points out, psychiatric disorders, including insomnia and

depression, are not specific to any one therapy and are manageable.

[Chronic myeloid leukemia] is a life-threatening disease and

treatments such as [dasatinib] have led to significant positive

advances for patients, " said Henry of Bristol-Myers Squibb in a

communication to Medscape Oncology.

Novartis, the makers of imatinib, did not respond to Medscape

Oncology about the letter and case reports of depression.

Imatinib is indicated for chronic myeloid leukemia and

gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GIST), and dasatinib is also

indicated for chronic myeloid leukemia, but in patients with

resistance or intolerance to previous therapy, including imatinib.

Both drugs are also indicated for use in patients Philadelphia

chromosome-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia.

Imatinib and dasatinib are widely considered to have revolutionized

the treatment of both GIST and chronic myeloid leukemia.

Inconsistent Response to Depression Treatment

TKI-associated psychiatric symptoms responded inconsistently to

standard antidepressant treatment; according to the authors. " Most

cancer-related depressions are relatively responsive to low-dose

antidepressant medications and psychotherapy, and these TKI-related

depressions are not, " said Dr. Block.

Only a small minority of patients with cancer develops depression

related to their illness, she added. The depressions seen in this

series of patients was not disease-related, according Dr. Block.

" The treatment-associate d depression we saw with the TKIs occurred in

temporal relationship to starting and stopping the drug, in patients

without a prior history or family history of depression, was less

responsive to treatment than usual depressions, and was unusually

severe, " she summarized.

In the event of TKI-associated depression, dose reduction may benefit

some patients. In severe treatment-refractor y cases, discontinuation

of the suspect TKI should be considered, say authors of the letter.

The authors emphasized the importance of close and careful monitoring

of depression and suicide ideation. " Given the known elevated risk of

suicide in cancer patients, suicidal ideation should be treated as a

psychiatric emergency, with immediate referral to a psychiatrist for

assessment, " they write.

Prescribing Information Lists Depression as Adverse Effect

The prescribing information for both imatinib and dasatinib lists

depression as an adverse event. However, depression is not

highlighted with a warning or precaution/caution for either drug.

In a clinical trial of imatinib among newly diagnosed chronic myeloid

leukemia patients, depression (all grades) occurred in 14.9% of

patients, and grade 3/4 depression occurred in 0.5% of patients. In a

trial of adjuvant imatinib among GIST patients, depression (all

grades) occurred in 6.8% of patients and grade 3/4 depression

occurred in 0.9% of patients.

In the dasatinib prescribing information, depression is listed as

occurring in 1% to more than 10% of patients; no mention is made of

the depression grade.

Sample Story

The letter from the Dana-Farber clinicians details the 7 cases of

depression seen in their clinics, including the following abridged

version of 1 of the case reports.

A 55-year-old male with GIST, diagnosed in January 2000, underwent

complete resection, but the disease recurred in March 2001. He

was " coping well " with his metastatic cancer diagnosis, worked full

time, and ran 4 miles daily.

Within 5 months of being prescribed 800 mg/day of imatinib, the

patient developed new severe depression. He experienced decreased

libido, diminished attention span, disorganization of thoughts, and

intense feelings of hopelessness, helplessness, and demotivation. He

began to struggle in his corporate leadership role. Symptoms proved

refractory to standard therapy for depression. The imatinib dose was

reduced to 400 mg/day. The patient then reported an increase in

energy level with alleviation of depressed affect, which was

sustained for about 1 year.

Then, he again reported worsening depression, became periodically

tearful, and was unable to function at work. Eventually, imatinib

treatment was discontinued and he experienced prompt resolution of

depression.

Over the course of this man's illness, he had been challenged 5 times

with high-dose imatinib (600 to 800 mg/day), write the letter

authors. Each time, imatinib therapy precipitated depression. In

every instance but one, depressive symptoms diminished or resolved

completely with dose interruption.

Dr. Block has disclosed no relevant financial relationships. Those of

her coauthors are listed at the end of the published correspondence.

J Clin Oncol. 2009;27:312- 313. Abstract

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks , I take a 1000 mg vitamin D pill every day since about 2 months ago

.. It does not seem to have made a difference. I am not any worse so that is a

good thing.LOL

Eva

From: Shipley

Sent: Tuesday, January 27, 2009 7:41 PM

Subject: Re: [ ] Depression ? caused by medication ? Jan 2009

Eva The lack of light in the days gets me down ,of course you work where there

is light.I was given a drug vitamon D3 50,000iu.You only take it 2 times a week.

It helps where you do not get sun .It will be hard to find .I don,t know if it

helps next year I'm goning south .

________________________________

From: Eva <evaob365@...>

Sent: Tuesday, January 27, 2009 3:06:01 PM

Subject: Re: [ ] Depression ? caused by medication ? Jan 2009

I have had mild to severe depression ever since starting on Gleevec ( Apr. 2008)

It just to be getting worse. I seem to have a head full of water...(tears) most

days.

Eva

From: suehurt28

Sent: Tuesday, January 27, 2009 3:24 AM

groups (DOT) com

Subject: [ ] Depression ? caused by medication ? Jan 2009

Good Afternoon

If anyone has had a sudden or slow build up of depression since

diagnosed of CML and then it would also be that you commenced your

CML medication at the same time.

Has anyone considered the condition maybe contributed by your

medication.

It is only something that your specialist can evaluate - however

it is food for thought.

What is your experience ?

An abstract from Medscape that maybe of interest to you all

discussing this very topic.

Sue

____________ _________ _________ _________ _________ _________ _

Case Histories of Severe Depression With Imatinib and Dasatinib

Nick Mulcahy

January 16, 2009

- Seven patients receiving the tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs)

imatinib (Gleevec, Novartis) or dasatinib (Sprycel, Bristol-Myers

Squibb) have experienced severe and treatment-related depression,

according to clinicians from the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, whose

letter on the subject was published in the January 10 issue of the

Journal of Clinical Oncology.

The correspondence calls for routine screening for suicide ideation

and depressive symptoms in all patients being treated with the small-

molecule TKIs imatinib and dasatinib. The Dana-Farber clinicians also

call for dose-reduction and, if necessary, treatment discontinuation

as strategies to alleviate the depression.

TKIs have a " tolerable adverse-effect profile " that includes fluid

retention, diarrhea, cramps, and fatigue, note the authors, one of

whom, D. Block, MD, is chair of the department of psychosocial

oncology and palliative care at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, in

Boston, Massachusetts.

Dr. Block and her colleagues called TKI-associated depression " an

under-recognized small-molecule TKI effect. "

In an interview with Medscape Oncology, Dr. Block suggested that

clinicians may not have noticed depression in other TKI-treated

patients. " We know that diagnoses of depression are missed by

nonpsychiatric physicians the majority of the time, " she said.

A " striking pattern " exists in this series of 7 patients. " All were

coping well with their disease psychologically before

imatinib/dasatinib therapy, yet developed profound depression during

treatment, with many experiencing complete remission or improvement

of symptoms after dose reduction or drug discontinuation, " write the

authors of the letter.

TKI-associated depression was only noticed among patients taking

imatinib or dasatinib. However, " it is not inconceivable that similar

adverse effects may be seen with other TKIs, " write the authors. TKIs

share common mechanisms of action and have overlapping molecular

targets.

A spokesperson for Bristol-Myers Squibb, the makers of dasatinib,

also noted that the depression is not specific to 1 drug. " As the

letter points out, psychiatric disorders, including insomnia and

depression, are not specific to any one therapy and are manageable.

[Chronic myeloid leukemia] is a life-threatening disease and

treatments such as [dasatinib] have led to significant positive

advances for patients, " said Henry of Bristol-Myers Squibb in a

communication to Medscape Oncology.

Novartis, the makers of imatinib, did not respond to Medscape

Oncology about the letter and case reports of depression.

Imatinib is indicated for chronic myeloid leukemia and

gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GIST), and dasatinib is also

indicated for chronic myeloid leukemia, but in patients with

resistance or intolerance to previous therapy, including imatinib.

Both drugs are also indicated for use in patients Philadelphia

chromosome-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia.

Imatinib and dasatinib are widely considered to have revolutionized

the treatment of both GIST and chronic myeloid leukemia.

Inconsistent Response to Depression Treatment

TKI-associated psychiatric symptoms responded inconsistently to

standard antidepressant treatment; according to the authors. " Most

cancer-related depressions are relatively responsive to low-dose

antidepressant medications and psychotherapy, and these TKI-related

depressions are not, " said Dr. Block.

Only a small minority of patients with cancer develops depression

related to their illness, she added. The depressions seen in this

series of patients was not disease-related, according Dr. Block.

" The treatment-associate d depression we saw with the TKIs occurred in

temporal relationship to starting and stopping the drug, in patients

without a prior history or family history of depression, was less

responsive to treatment than usual depressions, and was unusually

severe, " she summarized.

In the event of TKI-associated depression, dose reduction may benefit

some patients. In severe treatment-refractor y cases, discontinuation

of the suspect TKI should be considered, say authors of the letter.

The authors emphasized the importance of close and careful monitoring

of depression and suicide ideation. " Given the known elevated risk of

suicide in cancer patients, suicidal ideation should be treated as a

psychiatric emergency, with immediate referral to a psychiatrist for

assessment, " they write.

Prescribing Information Lists Depression as Adverse Effect

The prescribing information for both imatinib and dasatinib lists

depression as an adverse event. However, depression is not

highlighted with a warning or precaution/caution for either drug.

In a clinical trial of imatinib among newly diagnosed chronic myeloid

leukemia patients, depression (all grades) occurred in 14.9% of

patients, and grade 3/4 depression occurred in 0.5% of patients. In a

trial of adjuvant imatinib among GIST patients, depression (all

grades) occurred in 6.8% of patients and grade 3/4 depression

occurred in 0.9% of patients.

In the dasatinib prescribing information, depression is listed as

occurring in 1% to more than 10% of patients; no mention is made of

the depression grade.

Sample Story

The letter from the Dana-Farber clinicians details the 7 cases of

depression seen in their clinics, including the following abridged

version of 1 of the case reports.

A 55-year-old male with GIST, diagnosed in January 2000, underwent

complete resection, but the disease recurred in March 2001. He

was " coping well " with his metastatic cancer diagnosis, worked full

time, and ran 4 miles daily.

Within 5 months of being prescribed 800 mg/day of imatinib, the

patient developed new severe depression. He experienced decreased

libido, diminished attention span, disorganization of thoughts, and

intense feelings of hopelessness, helplessness, and demotivation. He

began to struggle in his corporate leadership role. Symptoms proved

refractory to standard therapy for depression. The imatinib dose was

reduced to 400 mg/day. The patient then reported an increase in

energy level with alleviation of depressed affect, which was

sustained for about 1 year.

Then, he again reported worsening depression, became periodically

tearful, and was unable to function at work. Eventually, imatinib

treatment was discontinued and he experienced prompt resolution of

depression.

Over the course of this man's illness, he had been challenged 5 times

with high-dose imatinib (600 to 800 mg/day), write the letter

authors. Each time, imatinib therapy precipitated depression. In

every instance but one, depressive symptoms diminished or resolved

completely with dose interruption.

Dr. Block has disclosed no relevant financial relationships. Those of

her coauthors are listed at the end of the published correspondence.

J Clin Oncol. 2009;27:312- 313. Abstract

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks Jackie, I am on a mild antidepressant but this just seems to come in

waves. I work fulltime in a retail store. Some days I just cry all the way to

work . I need the benefits so I have to go. I feel worse if I stay home anyway

because I curl up like you and just feel so full of despair. I just keep telling

myself tomorrow will be better.

Eva

dx Feb 08

Gleevec Apr /08 400mg

From: jackie schneider

Sent: Thursday, January 29, 2009 9:13 PM

Subject: Re: [ ] Depression ? caused by medication ? Jan 2009

Dear Eva,

I have been on anti depressants for a couple years now. It started a year

after my diagnosis. I found myself sitting in a chair curled up in a blanket

most days, or laying on the couch. My stomach hurt constantly and I was very

disfunctional. Tried to work, but it wasn't going well. After advice from my

social worker, I started Zoloft at a very low dose and continue with it today.

I can relate to your bitterness - the sun is a great healer. A nurse from Mdacc

prescribed :) 20 minutes of it daily and it helped so much. It got me out of

house.

I hope you are feeling better. Depression is just one more side effect of this

yuckky disease.

God Bless,

Jackie Schneider

dx 4/14/04

From: Eva <evaob365@...>

Subject: Re: [ ] Depression ? caused by medication ? Jan 2009

Date: Thursday, January 29, 2009, 7:57 PM

I take Vit " D " and half an antidepressant every night at bed time . I am usually

upbeat with a great sense of humor and I have become very depressed and bitter

and quite sullen sometimes. I don't know how my husband stands me . Good thing

he is a long haul trucker.

Next month will be my 1st cancerversary. But I am still Alive !!! Thanks Eva

From: Rosen Lum

Sent: Tuesday, January 27, 2009 7:46 PM

groups (DOT) com

Subject: RE: [ ] Depression ? caused by medication ? Jan 2009

Hi, Eva. Are you taking anything besides Gleevec? After taking Gleevec for about

a year, I developed a kind of spastic tremor in my right hand and right foot. A

neurologist prescribed Neurontin, which eliminated the tremor, but may have left

depression in its stead. I, too, have been experiencing a terrible despair over

the past several months. It visits just like clockwork every day from early to

late afternoon. My regular doc said the regularity with which it occurred

suggested to her that it was meds-related, most likely the Neurontin. She

suggested I cut the dose in half. It has helped HUGELY. I looked up Neurontin on

WorstPills.org (dr. Sidney Wolfe) and learned that Neurontin has been linked to

depression and suicidal feelings!

In addition, I started taking Vit. D supplements and I get out and take a walk

mid-morning when the sun's out.

groups (DOT) com

From: evaob365hotmail (DOT) com

Date: Tue, 27 Jan 2009 16:06:01 -0500

Subject: Re: [ ] Depression ? caused by medication ? Jan 2009

I have had mild to severe depression ever since starting on Gleevec ( Apr. 2008)

It just to be getting worse. I seem to have a head full of water...(tears) most

days.

Eva

From: suehurt28

Sent: Tuesday, January 27, 2009 3:24 AM

groups (DOT) com

Subject: [ ] Depression ? caused by medication ? Jan 2009

Good Afternoon

If anyone has had a sudden or slow build up of depression since

diagnosed of CML and then it would also be that you commenced your

CML medication at the same time.

Has anyone considered the condition maybe contributed by your

medication.

It is only something that your specialist can evaluate - however

it is food for thought.

What is your experience ?

An abstract from Medscape that maybe of interest to you all

discussing this very topic.

Sue

____________ _________ _________ _________ _________ _________ _

Case Histories of Severe Depression With Imatinib and Dasatinib

Nick Mulcahy

January 16, 2009

- Seven patients receiving the tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs)

imatinib (Gleevec, Novartis) or dasatinib (Sprycel, Bristol-Myers

Squibb) have experienced severe and treatment-related depression,

according to clinicians from the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, whose

letter on the subject was published in the January 10 issue of the

Journal of Clinical Oncology.

The correspondence calls for routine screening for suicide ideation

and depressive symptoms in all patients being treated with the small-

molecule TKIs imatinib and dasatinib. The Dana-Farber clinicians also

call for dose-reduction and, if necessary, treatment discontinuation

as strategies to alleviate the depression.

TKIs have a " tolerable adverse-effect profile " that includes fluid

retention, diarrhea, cramps, and fatigue, note the authors, one of

whom, D. Block, MD, is chair of the department of psychosocial

oncology and palliative care at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, in

Boston, Massachusetts.

Dr. Block and her colleagues called TKI-associated depression " an

under-recognized small-molecule TKI effect. "

In an interview with Medscape Oncology, Dr. Block suggested that

clinicians may not have noticed depression in other TKI-treated

patients. " We know that diagnoses of depression are missed by

nonpsychiatric physicians the majority of the time, " she said.

A " striking pattern " exists in this series of 7 patients. " All were

coping well with their disease psychologically before

imatinib/dasatinib therapy, yet developed profound depression during

treatment, with many experiencing complete remission or improvement

of symptoms after dose reduction or drug discontinuation, " write the

authors of the letter.

TKI-associated depression was only noticed among patients taking

imatinib or dasatinib. However, " it is not inconceivable that similar

adverse effects may be seen with other TKIs, " write the authors. TKIs

share common mechanisms of action and have overlapping molecular

targets.

A spokesperson for Bristol-Myers Squibb, the makers of dasatinib,

also noted that the depression is not specific to 1 drug. " As the

letter points out, psychiatric disorders, including insomnia and

depression, are not specific to any one therapy and are manageable.

[Chronic myeloid leukemia] is a life-threatening disease and

treatments such as [dasatinib] have led to significant positive

advances for patients, " said Henry of Bristol-Myers Squibb in a

communication to Medscape Oncology.

Novartis, the makers of imatinib, did not respond to Medscape

Oncology about the letter and case reports of depression.

Imatinib is indicated for chronic myeloid leukemia and

gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GIST), and dasatinib is also

indicated for chronic myeloid leukemia, but in patients with

resistance or intolerance to previous therapy, including imatinib.

Both drugs are also indicated for use in patients Philadelphia

chromosome-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia.

Imatinib and dasatinib are widely considered to have revolutionized

the treatment of both GIST and chronic myeloid leukemia.

Inconsistent Response to Depression Treatment

TKI-associated psychiatric symptoms responded inconsistently to

standard antidepressant treatment; according to the authors. " Most

cancer-related depressions are relatively responsive to low-dose

antidepressant medications and psychotherapy, and these TKI-related

depressions are not, " said Dr. Block.

Only a small minority of patients with cancer develops depression

related to their illness, she added. The depressions seen in this

series of patients was not disease-related, according Dr. Block.

" The treatment-associate d depression we saw with the TKIs occurred in

temporal relationship to starting and stopping the drug, in patients

without a prior history or family history of depression, was less

responsive to treatment than usual depressions, and was unusually

severe, " she summarized.

In the event of TKI-associated depression, dose reduction may benefit

some patients. In severe treatment-refractor y cases, discontinuation

of the suspect TKI should be considered, say authors of the letter.

The authors emphasized the importance of close and careful monitoring

of depression and suicide ideation. " Given the known elevated risk of

suicide in cancer patients, suicidal ideation should be treated as a

psychiatric emergency, with immediate referral to a psychiatrist for

assessment, " they write.

Prescribing Information Lists Depression as Adverse Effect

The prescribing information for both imatinib and dasatinib lists

depression as an adverse event. However, depression is not

highlighted with a warning or precaution/caution for either drug.

In a clinical trial of imatinib among newly diagnosed chronic myeloid

leukemia patients, depression (all grades) occurred in 14.9% of

patients, and grade 3/4 depression occurred in 0.5% of patients. In a

trial of adjuvant imatinib among GIST patients, depression (all

grades) occurred in 6.8% of patients and grade 3/4 depression

occurred in 0.9% of patients.

In the dasatinib prescribing information, depression is listed as

occurring in 1% to more than 10% of patients; no mention is made of

the depression grade.

Sample Story

The letter from the Dana-Farber clinicians details the 7 cases of

depression seen in their clinics, including the following abridged

version of 1 of the case reports.

A 55-year-old male with GIST, diagnosed in January 2000, underwent

complete resection, but the disease recurred in March 2001. He

was " coping well " with his metastatic cancer diagnosis, worked full

time, and ran 4 miles daily.

Within 5 months of being prescribed 800 mg/day of imatinib, the

patient developed new severe depression. He experienced decreased

libido, diminished attention span, disorganization of thoughts, and

intense feelings of hopelessness, helplessness, and demotivation. He

began to struggle in his corporate leadership role. Symptoms proved

refractory to standard therapy for depression. The imatinib dose was

reduced to 400 mg/day. The patient then reported an increase in

energy level with alleviation of depressed affect, which was

sustained for about 1 year.

Then, he again reported worsening depression, became periodically

tearful, and was unable to function at work. Eventually, imatinib

treatment was discontinued and he experienced prompt resolution of

depression.

Over the course of this man's illness, he had been challenged 5 times

with high-dose imatinib (600 to 800 mg/day), write the letter

authors. Each time, imatinib therapy precipitated depression. In

every instance but one, depressive symptoms diminished or resolved

completely with dose interruption.

Dr. Block has disclosed no relevant financial relationships. Those of

her coauthors are listed at the end of the published correspondence.

J Clin Oncol. 2009;27:312- 313. Abstract

Link to comment
Share on other sites

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