Safe Use of Carfilzomib in a Patient with Multiple Myeloma and Intermittent Type 1 Brugada ECG Pattern: A Case Report

Acta Haematol. 2020;143(5):481-485. doi: 10.1159/000502538. Epub 2019 Sep 25.

Abstract

Cardiovascular adverse events (CVAEs) are of considerable importance in patients with multiple myeloma (MM), given the significant prevalence of coexisting cardiovascular risk factors and the potential treatment-induced toxicity. Brugada syndrome is a rare cardiological disease responsible for arrhythmia and potentially fatal cardiac arrest. Brugada phenocopies (BrP) are clinical entities which show an identical ECG patterns, but prompt resolution after treatment of the trigger event. A 65-year-old female newly diagnosed MM patient treated with a carfilzomib-based chemotherapy developed a type 1 Brugada ECG pattern during a hospitalization course for sepsis. As fever and the septic event resolved, further ECGs showed no abnormalities and carfilzomib-based treatment could be resumed with no further CVAEs. Though fever-induced BrP is a universally known phenomenon, to our knowledge this is the first case of BrP in a patient with MM during active treatment with carfilzomib.

Keywords: Brugada phenocopies; Brugada syndrome; Carfilzomib; Myeloma.

Publication types

  • Case Reports

MeSH terms

  • Aged
  • Antineoplastic Agents / therapeutic use*
  • Brugada Syndrome / complications
  • Brugada Syndrome / diagnosis*
  • Brugada Syndrome / physiopathology
  • Diagnosis, Differential
  • Electrocardiography
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Multiple Myeloma / complications
  • Multiple Myeloma / diagnosis
  • Multiple Myeloma / drug therapy*
  • Oligopeptides / therapeutic use*

Substances

  • Antineoplastic Agents
  • Oligopeptides
  • carfilzomib