Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11452/27097
Title: Incidence of cyclophosphamide-induced urotoxicity and protective effect of mesna in rheumatic diseases
Authors: Yılmaz, Neslihan
Emmungil, Hakan
Gücenmez, Sercan
Özen, Gülşen
Yıldız, Fatih
Balkarlı, Ayşe
Kimyon, Gezmiş
Doğan, İsmail
Pamuk, Ömer Nuri
Yaşar, Şule
Çetin, Gözde Yıldırım
Yazıcı, Ayten
Eşmen, Serpil Ergülü
Cağatay, Yonca
Yılmaz, Sema
Cefle, Ayşe
Sayarlıoğlu, Mehmet
Kaşifoğlu, Timuçin
Karadağ, Ömer
KIsacık, Bünyamin
Çobankara, Veli
Erken, Eren
Direskeneli, Haner
Aksu, Kenan
Yavuz, Şule
Uludağ Üniversitesi/Tıp Fakültesi/Romatoloji Anabilim Dalı.
0000-0003-0298-4157
Coşkun, Belkıs Nihan
Pehlivan, Yavuz
Dalkılıç, Ediz
AAG-8227-2021
AAG-7155-2021
55646165400
57220381538
6506739457
Keywords: Hemorrhagic cystitis
Mesna
Rheumatic diseases
Induced hemorrhagic cystitis
Intravenous cyclophosphamide
Bladder toxicity
Controlled-trial
Lupus nephritis
Wegeners-granulomatosis
Pulse cyclophosphamide
Oral cyclophosphamide
Double-blind
Follow-up
Rheumatology
Issue Date: Sep-2015
Publisher: J Rheumatol Publication
Citation: Yılmaz, N. vd. (2015). "Incidence of cyclophosphamide-induced urotoxicity and protective effect of mesna in rheumatic diseases". Journal of Rheumatology, 42(9), 1661-1666.
Abstract: Objective. To assess bladder toxicity of cyclophosphamide (CYC) and uroprotective effect of mesna in rheumatic diseases. Methods. Data of 1018 patients (725 women/293 men) treated with CYC were evaluated in this retrospective study. All of the following information was obtained: the cumulative CYC dose, route of CYC administration, duration of therapy, concomitant mesna usage, and hemorrhagic cystitis. Cox proportional hazard model was used for statistics. Results. We identified 17 patients (1.67%) with hemorrhagic cystitis and 2 patients (0.19%) with bladder cancer in 4224 patient-years. The median time for diagnosis to hemorrhagic cystitis was 10 months (4-48) and bladder cancer was 8 years (6-10.9). There were 583 patients (57.2%) who received mesna with intravenous CYC therapy. We observed similar incidence rate for hemorrhagic cystitis in both patient groups concomitantly treated with or without mesna [9/583 (1.5%) vs 8/425 (1.8%) respectively, p = 0.08]. Cumulative CYC dose (HR for 10-g increments 1.24, p < 0.001) was associated with hemorrhagic cystitis. Conclusion. Cumulative dose was the only risk factor for hemorrhagic cystitis in patients treated with CYC. No proof was obtained for the uroprotective effect of mesna in our cohort.
URI: https://doi.org/10.3899/jrheum.150065
https://www.jrheum.org/content/42/9/1661
http://hdl.handle.net/11452/27097
ISSN: 0315-162X
Appears in Collections:Scopus
Web of Science

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