Definition:

  • Pulmonary fibrosis (PF) is a chronic, progressive interstitial lung disease characterized by fibrotic remodeling of the lung parenchyma, leading to reduced lung compliance, impaired gas exchange, and restrictive lung disease.
  • In oncology, PF is often drug- or radiation-induced.

Etiology in Oncology

  1. Chemotherapy-induced
  2. Radiation-induced
    • Thoracic irradiation → lung tissue within the radiation field
    • Risk increases with higher doses, concurrent chemo
  3. Targeted / Immunotherapy
    • Checkpoint inhibitors (e.g., anti-PD-1/PD-L1, anti-CTLA-4) → immune-mediated pneumonitis → may progress to fibrosis if severe

Pathophysiology

  • Injury to alveolar epithelial cells → inflammatory cascade → fibroblast proliferation → collagen deposition → irreversible scarring
  • Cytokines involved: TGF-β, IL-1, TNF-α

Clinical Features

  • Progressive dyspnea on exertion
  • Non-productive dry cough
  • Fatigue, hypoxemia
  • Fine bibasilar inspiratory crackles on auscultation

Diagnosis

Management & Pharmacist Role

  1. Prevention / Risk Mitigation
    • Limit cumulative doses of pulmonary-toxic chemo (e.g., bleomycin <400 IU)
    • Avoid high oxygen concentrations in patients receiving bleomycin
    • Dose adjustments in renal impairment (bleomycin excretion is renal)
  2. Supportive Care
    • Oxygen therapy for hypoxemia
    • Pulmonary rehab for exercise tolerance
    • Monitor PFTs periodically during and after therapy
  3. Pharmacologic Therapy
    • Corticosteroids for inflammatory or early pneumonitis
    • Anti-fibrotic agents (e.g., pirfenidone, nintedanib) under investigation
    • Avoid further lung-toxic agents
  4. Drug-Specific Pearls
    • Bleomycin: Monitor baseline and serial DLCO, avoid high O₂, watch for pulmonary symptoms
    • Busulfan: Pulmonary function monitoring during conditioning for stem cell transplant
    • Methotrexate: Usually dose-dependent; monitor long-term use

High-Yield Pharmacist Pearls

  • Cumulative dose and age increase risk (older adults higher risk)
  • Early detection of pneumonitis can prevent progression to fibrosis
  • Drug interactions: concurrent thoracic RT or other pulmonary-toxic drugs increase risk
  • Patient counseling: report new cough, dyspnea, or exercise intolerance immediately
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