AI Article Synopsis

  • Motesanib, a medication used for advanced cancers, has been linked to gallbladder toxicity, prompting a study on its effects on gallbladder size and function.
  • In a trial involving 49 patients, treatment with motesanib led to an average increase in gallbladder volume and a decrease in function, with some patients experiencing gallbladder-related issues.
  • Findings indicated that while motesanib caused some gallbladder complications, these effects appeared reversible after stopping the medication.

Article Abstract

Background: Gallbladder toxicity, including cholecystitis, has been reported with motesanib, an orally administered small-molecule antagonist of VEGFRs 1, 2 and 3; PDGFR; and Kit. We assessed effects of motesanib on gallbladder size and function.

Methods: Patients with advanced metastatic solid tumors ineligible for or progressing on standard-of-care therapies with no history of cholecystitis or biliary disease were randomized 2:1:1 to receive motesanib 125 mg once daily (Arm A); 75 mg twice daily (BID), 14-days-on/7-days-off (Arm B); or 75 mg BID, 5-days-on/2-days-off (Arm C). Primary endpoints were mean change from baseline in gallbladder size (volume by ultrasound; independent review) and function (ejection fraction by CCK-HIDA; investigator assessment).

Results: Forty-nine patients received ≥1 dose of motesanib (Arms A/B/C, n = 25/12/12). Across all patients, gallbladder volume increased by a mean 22.2 cc (from 38.6 cc at baseline) and ejection fraction decreased by a mean 19.2% (from 61.3% at baseline) during treatment. Changes were similar across arms and appeared reversible after treatment discontinuation. Three patients had cholecystitis (grades 1, 2, 3, n = 1 each) that resolved after treatment discontinuation, one patient developed grade 3 acute cholecystitis requiring cholecystectomy, and two patients had other notable grade 1 gallbladder disorders (gallbladder wall thickening, gallbladder dysfunction) (all in Arm A). Two patients developed de novo gallstones during treatment. Twelve patients had right upper quadrant pain (Arms A/B/C, n = 8/1/3). The incidence of biliary "sludge" in Arms A/B/C was 39%/36%/27%.

Conclusions: Motesanib treatment was associated with increased gallbladder volume, decreased ejection fraction, biliary sludge, gallstone formation, and infrequent cholecystitis.

Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00448786.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3688238PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-13-242DOI Listing

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