Litcius/Paper detail

Management of infusion-related reactions in cancer therapy: strategies and challenges

Ana Barroso, F. Estevinho, Venceslau Hespanhol, E. Teixeira, Joäo Carvalho, António Araújo

2024ESMO Open42 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Several anticancer therapies have the potential to cause infusion-related reactions (IRRs) in the form of adverse events that typically occur within minutes to hours after drug infusion. IRRs can range in severity from mild to severe anaphylaxis-like reactions. Careful monitoring at infusion initiation, prompt recognition, and appropriate clinical assessment of the IRR and its severity, followed by immediate management, are required to ensure patient safety and optimal outcomes. Lack of standardization in the prevention, management, and reporting of IRRs across cancer-treating institutions represents not only a quality and safety gap but also a disparity in cancer care. The present article, supported by recently published data, was developed to standardize these procedures across institutions and provide a useful tool for health care providers in clinical practice to recognize early signs and symptoms of an IRR and promptly and appropriately manage the event.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineIntensive care medicineStandardizationAdverse effectClinical PracticeHealth carePatient safetyCancerMedical emergencyPhysical therapyPharmacologyInternal medicineLawPolitical scienceEconomicsEconomic growthDrug-Induced Adverse ReactionsChemotherapy-related skin toxicityHER2/EGFR in Cancer Research