Abstract
Purpose
Venetoclax-based treatment for chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) can be a logistically burdensome regimen due to extensive required monitoring of tumor lysis syndrome (TLS). The purpose of this study was to evaluate the feasibility and safety of pharmacist and registered nurse (RN) driven management of venetoclax ramp-up in CLL.
Methods
This was a prospective, pilot program for patients receiving venetoclax-based therapy for CLL. Patients had nine weekly visits during the first three cycles of therapy, of which five visits were independently performed by a pharmacist or RN. Laboratory tests to evaluate TLS were ordered and monitored independently by the RN in collaboration with clinicians (physician, nurse practitioner, physician assistant).
Results
Thirty CLL patients, median age 67 years, 73% treated in the frontline setting, started venetoclax between May 2022 and January 2023. After the initial three weeks of obinutuzumab treatment, TLS risk prior to venetoclax initiation had improved to low (93%), medium (3%), and high (3%). There was zero incidence of laboratory or clinical TLS by Howard criteria during the venetoclax ramp-up for all patients. Pharmacist and RNs performed 139 independent visits and monitored 197 sets of TLS labs.
Conclusion
Use of independent pharmacist and RN visits for toxicity checks and TLS monitoring during weekly venetoclax dose ramp-up did not lead to increased incidence of TLS in patients with CLL. These visits increased both access and efficiency within the CLL clinic. This concept has the potential to be applied in other cancer care settings with a variety of treatment regimens.
Keywords
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