Treatment with doxorubicin often causes undesirable effects, and some of these effects are serious enough to entail careful monitoring of the patient. The frequency and kind of undesirable effects are influenced by the speed of administration and the dosage. Bone-marrow suppression is an acute dose limiting adverse effect, but is mostly transient. Clinical consequences of doxorubicin bone marrow/haematological toxicity may be fever, infections, sepsis/septicaemia, septic shock, haemorrhages, tissue hypoxia or death. Nausea and vomiting as well as alopecia are seen in almost all patients.
Common (≥1/100 to <1/10)
Cardiac disorders: Cardiomyopathy (2%; e.g. decrease of LVEF, dyspnoea), ECG changes (e.g. sinus tachycardia, tachyarythmia, ventricular tachycardia, bradycardia, bundle branch block)
Blood and lymphatic system disorders: Bone-marrow suppression
Gastrointestinal disorders: Nausea, vomiting, mucositis, anorexia, diarrhoea
Renal and urinary disorders: Local reactions (chemical cystitis) might occur at intravesical treatment
Skin and subcutaneous tissue disorders: Alopecia
Uncommon (≥ 1/1,000 to <1/100)
Gastrointestinal disorders: In combination with cytarabine ulceration and necrosis of the colon, in particular the caecum, have been reported.
Rare (≥1/10,000 to <1/1,000)
Eye disorders: Conjunctivitis
Skin and subcutaneous tissue disorders:
Urticaria, exanthema, local erythematous reactions along the vein which was used for the injection, hyperpigmentation of skin and nails, onycholysis
General disorders and administration site conditions: Anaphylactic reactions, shivering, fever, dizziness
Blood and lymphatic system disorders:
Maximal bone-marrow suppression occurs after 10-14 days, but the white and red blood cell counts (blood values) are often normalised after 21 days. Dose reduction or increase of the dose interval should be considered if the blood values are not normalised. Haematological monitoring should be undertaken regularly in both haematological and non-haematological conditions. Secondary acute myeloid leukaemia (AML), with or without a pre-leukaemic phase, has in rare cases been reported in patients simultaneously treated with doxorubicin and anti-neoplastic drugs, which damage the DNA. These cases might have a short latency period, 1-3 years.
Cardiac disorders: Cardiotoxicity may be manifested in tachycardia including supraventricular tachycardia and ECG changes. Cardiomyopathy can develop even long after discontinuation of the treatment, and is of serious nature. It is often characterised by a decrease in LVEF, a decrease in amplitude of the QRS wave, rapid onset of cardiac dilatation, which often does not respond to treatment with medicinal products with inotropic effect. Acute transient ECG changes that occur directly in connection with, or a few hours after the administration, are in most cases reversible and are usually of no clinical significance.
Gastrointestinal disorders: Nausea and vomiting often occur during the first 24 hours after the administration. Mucositis (stomatitis and oesophagitis) may occur 5-10 days after administration, and is more frequent and serious when a therapy, which involves treatment during three consecutive days, is applied. Ulceration and necrosis of the colon, in particular the caecum, resulting in bleeding and serious infections, sometimes fatal, have been reported in patients with acute non lymphocytic leukaemia, who, during three days, were treated with doxorubicin in combination with cytarabine. Hyperpigmentation of oral mucosa also occurred.
Skin and subcutaneous tissue disorders: Alopecia is dose-dependent and in most cases reversible. Photosensitization, “radiation recall reaction”. Extravasation can lead to severe cellulitis, vesication and local tissue necrosis which may require surgical measures (including skin grafts).
Other side effects:
Hyperuricaemia, bronchospasm, amenorrhoea, transient increase of liver enzymes.